
What is RTGS (real-time gross settlement)?
Real-time gross settlement (RTGS) is a payment settlement mechanism in which each transaction is settled individually and immediately in central bank money, without netting or batching. Once a payment clears in an RTGS system, it is final and cannot be reversed. This makes RTGS the standard infrastructure for high-value, time-critical transfers where settlement risk cannot be tolerated.
RTGS systems sit at the core of national payment infrastructure globally. The major central bank-operated systems, including Fedwire (USD), CHAPS via RT2 (GBP), and T2 (EUR), collectively process tens of trillions of dollars in value every day.
How RTGS settlement works
RTGS differs from deferred net settlement (DNS) systems, which accumulate payment obligations throughout the day and net them against each other before settling once or a few times daily. In RTGS, each payment is settled the moment it is submitted, provided the sending institution has sufficient funds in its central bank account.
The key mechanics are:
- Individual settlement: Each payment is processed as a standalone transaction, not pooled with others
- Central bank money: Settlement happens across accounts held at the central bank, eliminating counterparty credit risk between commercial banks
- Irrevocability: Once settled, a payment cannot be recalled or reversed by the sender
- Intraday liquidity dependency: Because each payment requires full cover at the time of submission, participants must actively manage their central bank account balances throughout the day
The tradeoff is liquidity cost. Gross settlement requires participants to hold more central bank reserves than net settlement, since there is no offset of incoming and outgoing payments before settlement occurs.
Major RTGS systems
RTGS systems are operated by central banks and serve as the backbone of domestic high-value payment infrastructure. The principal systems relevant to fintechs operating across major currency corridors are:
Fedwire (USD)
The Federal Reserve's Fedwire Funds Service is the RTGS system for US dollar payments. In 2024, Fedwire processed an average daily volume of 836,322 transactions, with a daily average value of approximately $4.51 trillion (USD) and an average transfer value of approximately $5.4 million (USD). Fedwire operates during defined daily windows on banking days, with settlement finality occurring in central bank funds.
RT2 / CHAPS (GBP)
CHAPS (Clearing House Automated Payment System) is the UK's high-value payment system, operating over the Bank of England's RTGS infrastructure. In April 2025, the Bank of England completed a multi-year renewal programme, migrating to a new core ledger and settlement engine called RT2. In 2025, CHAPS settled £93.9 trillion (GBP) in total value, averaging £371.3 billion per day across 53.3 million payments.
T2 (EUR)
T2 is the Eurosystem's RTGS system for euro-denominated payments, operated by the European Central Bank. In 2023, T2 settled 104 million transactions with total turnover of €559 trillion (EUR), with daily turnover ranging from €1.4 trillion to €4.7 trillion. As of end-2023, T2 had 956 direct participants holding an RTGS account, providing access to 5,368 correspondent institutions worldwide.
RTGS vs. other settlement mechanisms
RTGS is one of three primary settlement models used in payment infrastructure. Understanding the distinctions helps when evaluating which rails are appropriate for specific use cases.
Deferred net settlement (DNS) systems, such as standard ACH and SEPA Credit Transfer, accumulate payments across the day and settle net positions at defined intervals. This reduces liquidity requirements but introduces intraday settlement risk and processing windows.
Instant payment systems, such as RTP and FedNow in the US and SEPA Instant in Europe, settle individual transactions in near-real time but do so across commercial bank reserves rather than directly in central bank money in the same way RTGS does. Many instant payment systems ultimately settle their net positions across RTGS infrastructure at defined points.
RTGS itself is not a retail payment rail. It is the interbank settlement layer. When a Faster Payments transaction settles in the UK, for example, the net obligations between participating banks are discharged across RTGS accounts. The end customer sees a near-instant transfer; the bank-to-bank settlement happens through RTGS.
Why RTGS matters for fintechs building on payment infrastructure
Fintechs rarely access RTGS directly. Access typically requires central bank account eligibility, which in most jurisdictions is restricted to licensed banks and certain systemically important non-bank institutions. However, understanding RTGS is operationally important for several reasons:
- Settlement finality: Payment products that depend on same-day finality, such as high-value disbursements or FX settlement, depend on RTGS operating hours. Payments submitted after the RTGS cutoff settle the next banking day
- Liquidity windows: Pre-funding requirements for platforms that sponsor non-bank fintechs are tied to RTGS settlement cycles. Knowing when intraday net positions are settled determines how much liquidity needs to be held
- Rail selection: SWIFT cross-border payments ultimately settle across domestic RTGS systems at each end. Delays in correspondent chains often reflect RTGS cutoff timing, not just SWIFT messaging latency
- ISO 20022 adoption: Major RTGS systems have migrated or are migrating to ISO 20022 messaging. CHAPS completed the transition in June 2023; Fedwire's migration is underway. Richer structured data in RTGS messages flows downstream into improved reconciliation and compliance screening for fintechs on those rails
For platforms processing USD, GBP, or EUR flows, RTGS infrastructure sets the outer constraint on same-day settlement. Payment reconciliation processes should account for RTGS operating hours as a non-negotiable boundary in any same-day settlement commitment.