Payments

What are ACH transfer limits?

ACH transfer limits are the maximum dollar amounts permitted for ACH transactions, set at two levels: network rules established by NACHA and institution-level limits set by the bank or ODFI originating the payment. Understanding which limit applies in a given situation requires knowing both the payment type and the policies of the financial institution involved.

For businesses and platforms processing large volumes of payments, ACH limits are an operational constraint that affects which rail to use, how to structure large transactions, and when to route payments to wire transfer or instant payment networks instead.

How ACH limits work

ACH payments move through the network via ODFIs, which are the banks or financial institutions that originate payment instructions on behalf of their customers. NACHA sets the rules for the network, but each ODFI determines its own transaction limits within those rules.

This creates a two-layer structure:

  • NACHA network limits: Apply specifically to Same Day ACH. Standard ACH has no NACHA-imposed per-transaction dollar cap at the network level
  • Institution-level limits: Banks set their own limits for both standard and Same Day ACH based on customer type, account history, credit risk, and their own risk appetite. These vary widely

A business may find that NACHA rules technically allow a transaction, but its bank's own limit is lower. Consumer accounts at retail banks often have ACH limits of a few thousand dollars per day. Business accounts typically have higher limits, sometimes reaching hundreds of thousands of dollars, though this depends entirely on the institution.

Standard ACH limits

Standard ACH transactions, which settle in one to three business days, have no per-transaction dollar limit set by NACHA at the network level. There is no ceiling that applies across all transactions by rule.

In practice, the effective limit is set by the originating bank. Banks assess each originator's transaction volumes, credit exposure, and return rate history before assigning an ACH exposure limit, which is the maximum aggregate dollar amount of ACH transactions the bank will allow to be outstanding at any given time. Originators whose volumes exceed their exposure limit may have files suspended or may need to request a temporary or permanent limit increase.

For high-volume originators such as payroll processors, insurance companies, or payment platforms, the exposure limit negotiation with the ODFI is an important part of the banking relationship.

Same Day ACH limits

Same Day ACH has a NACHA-imposed per-transaction limit that applies across the network. The current limit is $1 million per transaction, effective since March 2022 when NACHA raised it from $100,000. That increase produced an immediate 30% rise in Same Day ACH payment volume and a 118% increase in value within two months of taking effect.

Not all SEC codes are eligible for Same Day ACH. Certain entry types, including ARC, BOC, POP, and RCK, are excluded regardless of dollar amount. International ACH transactions (IATs) are also ineligible for same-day processing.

The proposed $10 million increase

NACHA is proposing to raise the Same Day ACH per-transaction limit from $1 million to $10 million, with an effective date of March 19, 2027. The comment period for the proposal closed December 18, 2025. If adopted, the change would make an estimated $7 to $8 trillion in additional ACH dollars eligible for same-day settlement annually.

The proposal is partly driven by alignment with other major payment rails. RTP raised its per-payment limit to $10 million in February 2025, and FedNow raised its limit to $10 million in November 2025. Consistent limits across rails reduce the operational complexity of deciding which network to use for a given transaction size.

ACH limits vs. wire transfer limits

For transactions that exceed ACH limits, wire transfer is the standard alternative. Fedwire and CHIPS have no per-transaction dollar cap, making wire the default rail for very large value transfers.

The practical tradeoff between ACH and wire for large transactions comes down to cost, speed, and reversibility:

  • Cost: ACH is significantly cheaper than wire, often by an order of magnitude. For high-volume originators, this difference is material
  • Speed: Same Day ACH settles within hours but only during banking hours on business days. Wire settles in real time during Fedwire operating hours
  • Reversibility: ACH transactions can be returned or reversed within defined windows. Wire transfers are final and cannot be reversed once settled
  • Limits: Wire has no network-level cap. Same Day ACH is capped at $1 million until the proposed 2027 increase takes effect

For platforms originating payroll, vendor payments, or B2B disbursements in the $1 million to $10 million range, the current Same Day ACH limit creates a gap. Transactions in that range must either go via standard ACH with multi-day settlement, via wire at higher cost, or via RTP or FedNow where the $10 million limit already applies.

How institution-level limits affect payment platforms

For fintechs and payment platforms originating ACH on behalf of their customers, institution-level limits are a practical constraint that affects product design. A platform offering next-day payouts via ACH can only move as much as its ODFI will allow. If a customer wants to initiate a $5 million payroll run via Same Day ACH, the platform needs both a NACHA-compliant limit and an ODFI whose internal limit supports that transaction size.

Platforms that process high transaction volumes should negotiate their ACH exposure limits with their banking partners as part of the initial setup, and revisit those limits as volumes grow. An unexpected limit breach can result in file suspension and delayed settlement, which has direct consequences for payment reconciliation and the end recipients waiting for funds.

Continue learning

ACH payment returns

Category
Read more

Stablecoin yield

Category
Read more

Cash float

Category
Read more

BAI2

Category
Read more

Compliance risk management

Category
Read more

ACH transfer limit

Category
Read more

Deposit Account Control Agreement (DACA)

Category
Read more

Currency Transaction Report (CTR)

Category
Read more

Crypto faucet

Category
Read more

FBO account

Category
Read more

OTC trading

Category
Read more

Virtual IBAN

Category
Read more

Third-party payment

Category
Read more

Ledger balance

Category
Read more

Issuer Identification Number (IIN)

Category
Read more

CASPs (Crypto-Assets Service Providers)

Category
Read more

Section 314(b)

Category
Read more

OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control)

Category
Read more

Penny test

Category
Read more

Cash pooling

Category
Read more

Money transmission

Category
Read more

Core Banking

Category
Read more

Sweep Account

Category
Read more

Flow of Funds

Category
Read more

Cash Application

Category
Read more

Bank Reconciliation

Category
Read more

Clearing Account

Category
Read more

Cash Reconciliation

Category
Read more

Take Rate

Category
Read more

CHAPS (Clearing House Automated Payment System)

Category
Read more

The Clearing House (TCH)

Category
Read more

A2A Payments

Category
Read more

Bulk Electronic Clearing System (BECS)

Category
Read more

Real-time gross settlement (RTGS)

Category
Read more

Same-day ACH

Category
Read more

ACH Return Codes

Category
Read more

PYUSD (PayPal USD)

Category
Read more

Sort Code

Category
Read more

Atomic Settlement

Category
Read more

Payment Orchestration

Category
Read more

T2

Category
Read more

Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN)

Category
Read more

Unified Payments Interface (UPI)

Category
Read more

Programmable Money

Category
Read more

QR Code Payments

Category
Read more

CHIPS (Clearing House Interbank Payments System)

Category
Read more

Nacha

Category
Read more

FedACH

Category
Read more

XRP (Ripple)

Category
Read more

EURC (Euro Coin)

Category
Read more

USDC (USD Coin)

Category
Read more

USDT (Tether)

Category
Read more

Fedwire

Category
Read more

On-Demand Liquidity (ODL)

Category
Read more

Payment Ledger

Category
Read more

Treasury Management

Category
Read more

Blockchain

Category
Read more

Liquidity Management

Category
Read more

Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP)

Category
Read more

Fiat Money

Category
Read more

Custodial vs Non-Custodial Wallets

Category
Read more

On/Off Ramps

Category
Read more

Payment Reconciliation

Category
Read more

Payment Service Provider (PSP)

Category
Read more

Payment API

Category
Read more

Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM)

Category
Read more

Stablecoin

Category
Read more

KYC (Know Your Customer)

Category
Read more

DEX (Decentralized Exchange)

Category
Read more

CEX (Centralized Exchange)

Category
Read more

Virtual account

Category
Read more

SPEI (Sistema de Pagos Electrónicos Interbancarios)

Category
Read more

Pix (Brazilian Instant Payment)

Category
Read more

RTP (Real-Time Payments)

Category
Read more

SWIFT

Category
Read more

ACH (Automated Clearing House)

Category
Read more

Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT)

Category
Read more

Wire transfer

Category
Read more

SEPA (Single Euro Payments Area)

Category
Read more

FedNow

Category
Read more
Download Due & Move Money Without Borders