Digital banking payments are no longer optional. Today, more than 80% of banking activities happen online, and nearly 70% of adults send or receive digital payments regularly. Consumers now expect instant, flexible, and fully digital payment experiences that allow them to manage money on their own terms.
This shift is forcing banks to rethink payment systems that were built for a very different era.

Why Digital Banking Is Redefining Payments
For decades, banks focused on deposits, basic transfers, and traditional lending. Legacy payment infrastructure was designed to support these core functions and proved reliable during economic downturns such as recessions and financial crises.
However, customer expectations have changed dramatically. Modern users want a complete digital banking experience, not just basic payment functionality. They expect mobile payments, real-time transfers, digital wallets, and seamless integration across platforms—features that fintech and digital-first banks deliver faster.
According to PricewaterhouseCoopers, frustration with the traditional correspondent banking model—slow, complex, and expensive—has accelerated the rise of non-bank payment providers offering low-cost, instant digital payments.
The Cost of Delaying Payments Modernization
Many financial institutions struggle to keep up because their payment systems are built on fragmented, outdated technology. Years of patchwork upgrades have created rigid infrastructures that are difficult to scale or modernize.
Research from IBM shows that banks often lack mature payment programs, with gaps in:
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Data utilization
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Back-office automation
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Payment infrastructure
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Specialized technology talent
Industry experts have even described some banks as “museums of technology,” still relying on systems designed decades ago. This makes rapid innovation nearly impossible.
Payments as a Key Revenue Driver for Banks
Payments modernization is no longer just about efficiency—it directly impacts revenue. A McKinsey global payments report estimates that payments will generate around 40% of total banking revenues by 2025.
The growth is driven by clear trends:
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Mobile payments growing over 20% annually
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Rising adoption of QR codes and super apps
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Increased demand for real-time payment systems
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Continued expansion of e-commerce and contactless payments
Between 2009 and 2019, the global payments market doubled in size, surpassing $2 trillion in value. Banks that fail to modernize risk losing relevance in this rapidly expanding ecosystem.
Why Innovation and Partnerships Matter
Despite strong market momentum, many financial institutions plan only minimal increases in spending on next-generation payment technologies. A Broadridge report found banks expect to allocate just 2–3% of IT budgets to modernization efforts—often not enough to keep pace with digital competitors.
This is where fintech partnerships play a critical role. Collaborating with payment technology providers allows banks to:
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Upgrade payment infrastructure faster
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Launch new digital payment products
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Reduce development and compliance costs
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Improve customer experience without rebuilding core systems
In fact, over half of banks surveyed by McKinsey said technology partnerships are essential to advancing payment capabilities.
The Future of Digital Banking Payments
The future of digital banking payments is real-time, scalable, and customer-centric. Financial institutions already have one major advantage: regulatory trust and established licenses. What they need now is modernization.
By investing in modern payment infrastructure and choosing the right technology partners, banks can meet rising consumer expectations while staying competitive in an increasingly digital financial landscape.
Payments modernization is no longer a long-term strategy—it’s an immediate requirement for banks that want to remain relevant in the digital banking era.


