There were two milestones in the establishment of SEPA: • Pan-European payment instruments for credit transfers began on 28 January 2008;
direct debits and
debit cards became available in November 2009. The
European Commission has established the legal foundation through the PSD. The commercial and technical frameworks for payment instruments were developed by the European Payments Council (EPC), made up of European banks. The EPC is committed to delivering three pan-European payment instruments: • Credit transfers:
SCT – SEPA Credit Transfer • Direct debits:
SDD – SEPA Direct Debit. Banks began offering this service on 2 November 2009. • Cards:
SEPA Cards Framework To provide end-to-end automated direct payment processing for SEPA-clearing, the EPC committed to delivering technical validation subsets of
ISO 20022. Whereas bank-to-bank messages (pacs) are mandatory for use, customer-to-bank payment initialization (PAIN) message types are not; however, they are strongly recommended. Because there is room for interpretation, it is expected that several PAIN specifications will be published in SEPA countries. Businesses, merchants, consumers and governments are also interested in the development of SEPA. The European Associations of Corporate Treasurers (EACT),
TWIST, the
European Central Bank, the
European Commission, the European Payments Council, the European Automated Clearing House Association (EACHA), payments processors and pan-European banking associations –
European Banking Federation (EBF),
European Association of Co-operative Banks (EACB) and the
European Savings Banks Group (ESBG) – are playing an active role in defining the services which SEPA will deliver. Since January 2008, banks have been switching customers to the new payment instruments. By 2010, the majority were expected to be on the SEPA framework. As a result, banks throughout the SEPA area (not just the
Eurozone) need to invest in technology with the capacity to support SEPA payment instruments. SEPA clearance is based on
International Bank Account Numbers (IBAN). Domestic euro transactions are routed by IBAN; earlier national-designation schemes were abolished by February 2014 (with delays in some countries), providing uniform access to the new payment instruments. Since February 2016 Eurozone payment system users no longer require
BIC sorting information for SEPA transactions; it is automatically derived from the IBAN for all banks in the SEPA area. An instant 24/7/365 payment scheme named SCT Inst went live on 21 November 2017 allowing
instant payment 24 hours a day and 365 days a year. The participating banks will handle the user interface and security, like for existing SEPA payments, e.g. web sites and mobile apps.
Key dates Uptake As of August 2014, 99.4% of credit transfers, 99.9% of direct debit, and 79.2% of card payments have been migrated to SEPA in the euro area. The official progress report was published in March 2013. In October 2010, the European Central Bank published its seventh progress report on SEPA. The European Central Bank regards SEPA as an essential element to advance the
usability and maturity of the euro. == See also ==