ISO 20022 is quietly reshaping the global payments landscape, and banks are facing compliance pressure

Gate News update: ISO 20022 is gradually changing the global financial payments system. Since the standard was introduced in 2004, it has been designed to replace the traditional message formats that have been used for a long time. The old system relies on free-text fields, so payment information often needs to be manually interpreted, which makes delays and errors more likely. With ISO 20022, structured, machine-readable data formats standardize names, addresses, and transaction information—enabling payment processing automation and significantly improving efficiency.

On November 22, 2025, SWIFT officially retired the traditional MT payment messages that had been used since the 1970s, marking the start of the structured era for the global payments network. Starting November 14, 2026, SWIFT will reject payment messages that include unstructured address data. This means financial institutions must fully adopt ISO 20022, or transactions may be rejected or delayed—while also increasing operating costs and regulatory pressure.

Analysts note that ISO 20022 is not only a compliance requirement, but also an opportunity for financial institutions to improve efficiency and modernize operations. By standardizing data, banks can process cross-border payments more efficiently and seamlessly integrate with emerging technologies such as blockchain-based settlement networks. Organizations that delay adopting the new format may fall behind in transaction speed and cost, while those that are first to implement data structuring and system modernization may gain scale and efficiency advantages.

Industry insiders believe that as the global payments system shifts to ISO 20022, financial infrastructure is undergoing deep restructuring. Organizations must understand that this is not just an update to message formats—it is a comprehensive upgrade to operations, risk management, and technology integration. In the coming years, banks and payment firms that can fully leverage structured data will be in a leading position in cross-border settlement and the application of emerging financial technologies.

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