A bank transfer that once took two business days now lands in seconds across the euro area. What began as a convenience inside banking apps has quietly reset expectations everywhere money moves, and companies whose funds still travel at the old speed are discovering that customers no longer accept the delay as normal.
The change runs in both directions. Paying instantly was the easy half; the harder adjustment is that consumers now expect money coming back to them, in refunds, claims, and payouts, to arrive just as fast.
The new baseline was set at the checkout
Instant transfers and mobile wallets did the initial work of retraining consumers. A generation of buyers has grown up treating any delay at checkout as a defect, and a payment flow that stalls for even a few seconds now loses sales that a faster competitor keeps.
Once paying became instant, the asymmetry started to grate. A customer who sends money in two seconds and waits five days to get it back experiences the gap as a choice the company made, not a technical limitation. Retailers processing returns, insurers settling small claims, and marketplaces releasing seller balances all face the same recalibrated clock.
Ten seconds became the reference speed
The expectation rests on real infrastructure rather than marketing. Payment systems across the euro area now run around the clock, including weekends and holidays, and confirm to both sides within moments whether the money has arrived. What used to be a batch process that paused overnight has become a continuous utility.
That reliability is documented rather than promised. The European Central Bank’s explainer on how instant credit transfers work describes funds reaching the recipient’s account within ten seconds of a payment order, at any hour of any day. Once a central bank publishes the reference speed, every slower transfer in the economy gets measured against it, whether the party moving the money is a bank, a marketplace, or an insurer.
Payout speed becomes published information
The clearest sign of the shift is that outbound payment speed is now written down where consumers shop around. Travel refund policies, insurer settlement times, and marketplace payout schedules have moved from fine print to selling point, and independent portals increasingly display them as a standard column alongside price.
Regulated entertainment illustrates how far this has gone. Estonia’s market shows the shift in miniature: the casinos in KasiinoGuru comparisons list withdrawal times alongside licence status and bonus terms, treating payout speed as ordinary product information rather than a promotional claim. When the time it takes to receive money becomes a published number, it gets compared like one, and every sector that returns funds to customers is inheriting that scrutiny.
Slow money is turning into a business risk
Payment operations used to be a back-office concern. They are becoming a competitive variable, because a payout that takes days now generates support tickets, chargebacks, and public reviews that a faster rival simply does not accumulate. Finance teams that once optimized for float are being asked to optimize for speed instead, a reversal with real costs attached.
The companies adapting fastest tend to be the ones whose customers can leave most easily. Where switching is a matter of minutes, the tolerance for waiting is measured in hours. The two-day transfer is not gone yet, but the customer who accepted it without noticing already is.
David Prior
David Prior is the editor of Today News, responsible for the overall editorial strategy. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist with over 20 years’ experience, and is also editor of the award-winning hyperlocal news title Altrincham Today. His LinkedIn profile is here.












































































