Instant Payments Adoption: 2025 in the Rearview Mirror
As 2026 is well on its way, financial institutions are looking back at important trends and lessons from 2025 to shape their digital roadmaps.
The emerging competition between the two major instant payments networks, the Ի , has created a landscape ripe for growth.
“Competition between RTP and FedNow will continue to unlock new use cases and differentiators – exactly what the market needs,” said Sayantan Chakraborty, head of digital payments at ƽ. “For the thousands of institutions that have yet to join either network, now is the time to build an instant roadmap that supports accountholder expectations and strengthens deposits.”
RTP: Leading in 2025
RTP drove strong growth in instant payments in 2025. The network processed antransactions daily in the fourth quarter.
RTP more than 400% growth in the daily average value of transactions and processed $405 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025, up from $80 billion in the same quarter of 2024.
In 2025’s second quarter, in payments processing value as participating financial institutions took advantage of the new $10 million transaction limit.
FedNow: Catching up
In 2025, FedNow also implemented a , leveling the playing field with RTP.
FedNow reached financial institutions in 2025 and experienced 460% year-over-year . While FedNow’s represent only about 2% of RTP’s 1.36 million, the network’s 2025 fourth quarter transaction value of is 62% of RTP’s.
The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s launchedin 2025 and facilitated through FedNow the first Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster relief to CB&S Bank. Many financial institutions that had operated solely on RTP, including and , adopted FedNow and are prepared for future government agency disbursements.
Waking up to an instant environment
Financial institutions adopted the networks quickly in 2025.
FedNow grew to , with larger financial institutions potentially tempted by instant government disbursements or , a convenient way to push money through FedNow to other institutions.
RTP reported it grew from 730 financial institutions by the end of 2025. While RTP has broader demand deposit account reach, FedNow has , with many in the community financial institution category.
“As these networks begin to mature, the growth indicates that financial institutions simply cannot hide from instant payments. They are here to stay,” Chakraborty said. “Federal government payments could certainly be the tipping point for widespread industry adoption.”
The road ahead
Shared use cases, including request for payment (RFP), for both networks appeal broadly to consumers and small businesses.
RFP enables consumers or small businesses to request payments from third parties, relying on the sender to “push” funds through the instant payment network rather than “pulling” them in a debit model, such as ACH payments. That type of transaction powers many other instant payments use cases, such as bill payments, digital wallet funding and business-to-business payment collection.
Other use cases for instant payments across both networks include:
“With this growth, financial institutions could face challenges related to the round-the-clock support required for 24/7 instant payments,” Chakraborty said. “As use cases, higher limits and growing consumer demand drive adoption, we may see financial institutions needing additional support to manage their account balances and monitor instant transactions in real time.”
Instant is here. Financial institutions can develop strong roadmaps to adopt applications and integrations to build for an instant future.
For more information, contact ƽ at fasterpayments@fiserv.com.
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