
What is BACS?
BACS, short for Bankers' Automated Clearing Services, is the UK's primary electronic funds transfer system for bank-to-bank payments. It operates two payment schemes: Bacs Direct Debit, which allows organizations to collect funds from customer accounts, and Bacs Direct Credit, which allows organizations to deposit funds directly into recipient accounts. Both are A2A payments, moving money directly between bank accounts without a card network in between.
Founded in 1968, BACS is one of the oldest and most deeply embedded payment systems in the UK. It has processed over 160 billion transactions since inception and settled 6.81 billion payments worth £5.8 trillion in 2024, according to Pay.UK. Eight in ten UK employees are paid via Bacs Direct Credit, and 90% of the UK population pays at least one regular bill by Direct Debit.
BACS became a wholly owned subsidiary of Pay.UK in May 2018. The underlying infrastructure is operated by Vocalink, a Mastercard company.
Bacs Direct Debit vs. Bacs Direct Credit
BACS operates two distinct schemes that serve opposite payment directions.
Bacs Direct Debit is a pull payment. An organization collects funds from a customer's bank account on the basis of a pre-authorized mandate called a Direct Debit Instruction (DDI). The customer authorizes the mandate once, specifying the organization and the terms under which it can collect. After that, the organization initiates collections on the agreed schedule without requiring further action from the customer.
Direct Debit is widely used for recurring payments: utilities, insurance premiums, loan repayments, subscription services, council tax, and rent. The success rate for Direct Debit payments is 95% to 100%, compared to 80% to 95% for card payments, because there is no card expiry or replacement issue.
Bacs Direct Credit is a push payment. The paying organization deposits funds directly into the recipient's account. It is used primarily for payroll, pension payments, government benefits, supplier payments, and refunds. Nearly 90% of the UK workforce is paid via Bacs Direct Credit.
How BACS works: the three day cycle
Every BACS payment, whether Direct Debit or Direct Credit, follows the same three business day processing cycle. For a detailed look at how settlement timing affects cash management across payment rails, see the guide to payment settlement cycles.
- Day 1 (Input): The originator submits payment instructions to the BACS system before the cutoff. Instructions include the recipient's sort code and account number, the payment amount, and the processing date
- Day 2 (Processing): Banks validate the instructions and prepare to action them
- Day 3 (Entry/Settlement): Funds are simultaneously debited from the payer's account and credited to the recipient's account
The system operates on weekdays between 7am and 10:30pm. It does not process on weekends or UK bank holidays. A payment submitted after the cutoff on a Friday will not settle until the following Tuesday.
Around 90% of Bacs Direct Credit payments arrive in the recipient's account by 6am on the settlement day.
The Direct Debit Guarantee
The Direct Debit Guarantee is a consumer protection scheme that applies to all Direct Debit payments in the UK. It entitles customers to:
- Advance notice of any change to the collection amount, date, or frequency
- An immediate full refund from their bank for any payment taken in error or without authorization
- The right to cancel a Direct Debit at any time
The guarantee is underwritten by the paying bank, not the originating organization. For businesses, this means disputed Direct Debits can be reversed by the customer's bank without the organization's consent, which creates a chargeback-like exposure for organizations collecting via Direct Debit.
BACS access: direct and indirect
Not all organizations connect to BACS directly. Access works at two levels.
- Direct access is available to approved financial institutions, primarily banks and building societies. There are 16 direct member banks of BACS. Direct members submit payment files directly to the BACS system using Bacstel-IP, the secure encrypted submission platform.
- Indirect access is available to any organization through a sponsor bank or payment service provider. The sponsor submits payment files on the organization's behalf. Most businesses and fintechs access BACS indirectly through their banking partner or a specialist bureau service.
BACS supporting services
Several automated services operate alongside the core BACS payment schemes:
- AUDDIS (Automated Direct Debit Instruction Service): Allows organizations to submit new Direct Debit mandates electronically to the customer's bank rather than on paper. Mandatory for new service users since 2008.
- ADDACS (Automated Direct Debit Amendment and Cancellation Service): Notifies organizations automatically when a customer amends or cancels a Direct Debit mandate, or when an account has been switched to a new bank.
- ARUDD (Automated Return of Unpaid Direct Debits): Returns unpaid Direct Debit entries to the originating organization with a reason code, similar in function to ACH return codes in the US.
- AWACS (Automated Withdrawal of Automated Credits Service): Alerts organizations when a Bacs Direct Credit payment cannot be applied to the destination account.
BACS vs. Faster Payments vs. CHAPS
BACS is one of three main interbank payment systems in the UK. The differences in settlement speed, value, and use case are important for anyone routing UK payments. CHAPS operates on a real-time gross settlement basis, settling each payment individually and immediately rather than in batches.
BACS sits between the two in terms of use case: it is the workhorse rail for bulk, scheduled, and recurring payments where same-day settlement is not required.
BACS and payment operations
For platforms and businesses processing UK payments, BACS has several operational characteristics worth understanding.
The three day settlement cycle means funds are not available immediately, creating a float window that needs to be accounted for in payment reconciliation and liquidity planning. Payments in transit on Days 1 and 2 sit as outstanding items until settlement on Day 3.
The Direct Debit Guarantee creates a dispute window that extends beyond settlement. Even after a Direct Debit has cleared, the customer can claim a refund from their bank, which results in a chargeback back to the originating organization. Organizations with high Direct Debit volumes need to track potential disputes as well as successful settlements.
For fintechs using virtual accounts or virtual IBANs to collect GBP payments from UK customers, BACS Direct Credit is a common inbound rail. The sort code and account number assigned to a virtual account can receive BACS credits in the same way as a standard bank account, allowing platforms to collect from UK payers without requiring a separate bank account for each client.