EU extends new SEPA bank payment system deadline by 6 months

10 January 2014

Last month we published news about SEPA (Single Euro Payments Area) and the impact on payroll if your organisation makes payments in euros.

News published on RTE states that the European Commission has extended the 1 February 2014 deadline for the introduction of SEPA.

The Single Euro Payments Area is meant to speed up payments and so reduce business and consumer costs by ensuring standard conditions, rights and obligations across Europe.

SEPA will still formally come into being on February 1 but payments made in other formats will continue to be accepted for another six months.

"I regret having to do this but it is a measure of prudence to counter the possible risk of disruption to payments," EU Internal Markets Commissioner Michel Barnier said in a statement.

"I have warned many times that migration was happening too slowly and call once more on member states to accelerate and intensify efforts to migrate to SEPA," Barnier said. "The transition period will not be extended after 1 August," he added.

The Commission said that by November, SEPA Credit Transfers were about 64% compliant and SEPA Direct Debits only 26%, meaning the February 1 deadline was "now highly unlikely" to be met.

The European Central Bank insisted that within the single currency euro zone bloc great progress had been made and urged all involved to complete the switch as quickly as possible.

"Strong and successful migration efforts have been carried out in the euro area," the ECB said in a statement, adding that the most recent information pointed to an acceleration.

"The vast majority of stakeholders will complete their migration on time," it said.

Stressing that the February 1 deadline remains in place, the ECB urged all "participants to complete the transition of all credit transfer and direct debit transactions to the SEPA standards by this date."

SEPA will cover the 28 EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, Monaco, Norway and Switzerland when fully operational.

Previous CIPP News