Pay by bank is having a naming moment, and that matters because confusion slows adoption. In the same category you will hear open banking payments, bank to bank, account to account, and pay by bank. The common thread is simple: the money moves from a customer’s bank account to a merchant’s bank account without card rails in the middle.
In the latest episode of Behind the Checkout, John Lunn (Gr4vy) and Alexandre Gonthier (Trustly) walk through what is driving momentum, what is holding it back, and what merchants should do next. One line from Alexandre is the clearest way to frame the method:
“It works from bank account to bank account directly with no third party network in the middle.”
If you sell online in 2026, the question is not “will pay by bank exist?” It already does. The question is whether your checkout, risk controls, and operations are ready to support it without hurting conversion or increasing fraud exposure.
Here’s the full episode:
Pay by bank is not the same as “enter your routing and account number” experiences from the early days of ecommerce. Alexandre calls out why that older model never worked at scale:
Pay by bank, as discussed in the episode, is essentially a modern user experience layered on top of bank rails. The customer authenticates with their bank using familiar behaviors (often Face ID or a banking login), similar to how a user signs in to a wallet.
Alexandre describes the UX shift this way:
“You move from having to fill out the form with information you don’t know to simply doing a Face ID or signing in to your bank.”
That is the first readiness theme for 2026: pay by bank succeeds when it feels as easy as a card or wallet.
Two forces are converging:
John frames the big change as near real-time confirmation. Historically, merchants avoided bank transfers in ecommerce because the payment might not confirm for days. In the episode, Alexandre explains how real-time networks change that and why they reduce a specific risk:
“With real time you eliminate that problem because you grab the funds in real time.”
Even when funds do not move instantly to the merchant, the merchant can receive confirmation in real time, or a guarantee, which enables shipping and fulfillment decisions.
Consumers already have a payment method that works. Cards and wallets are familiar, ubiquitous, and often rewarded. Alexandre makes the economic reality blunt:
“Merchants pay a lot for that product… interchange… it doesn’t go down… it goes up.”
In other words, the stakeholder with the strongest incentive to change behavior is the merchant. That affects how you design your pay by bank rollout. You cannot assume consumers will demand it on their own. You need to present it well and justify it clearly.
This is the part merchants underestimate. Pay by bank can be technically available and still fail commercially if the rollout ignores three adoption blockers.
John points out a common conversion issue: customers may want to pay from their bank, but they see an unfamiliar brand in the flow and hesitate. Alexandre agrees that leading with an unknown processor brand can curb conversion:
“No one is going to use something they don’t know when it comes to their money.”
This is a readiness issue, not a philosophical one. Your checkout presentation should emphasize “pay by bank” and the customer’s own bank. Any intermediary branding needs to be placed carefully and explained simply.
A strong quote from Alexandre should be printed and put on a slide for any ecommerce leadership team:
“If you don’t put an incentive structure in place why would consumers walk away from something that works?”
Cards win on rewards, habit, and familiarity. Pay by bank needs a value exchange for mainstream ecommerce adoption. In some verticals, adoption is already natural. In general retail, it often is not.
Real-time payments can behave more like cash. Alexandre describes the trade-off clearly: instant movement plus limited reversibility means liability questions matter.
He notes that regulators and banks often respond with velocity limits, and those limits reduce usable ecommerce cases. If you want pay by bank to work for meaningful order values, you need a risk strategy that is more nuanced than “cap everything.”
This checklist is designed for ecommerce teams that want to launch, expand, or optimize pay by bank without guessing. Use it as a working document across product, payments, fraud, finance, and support.
Goal: make pay by bank feel as fast and familiar as a wallet.
A practical benchmark: if your pay by bank flow takes noticeably longer than a wallet sign-in, conversion will suffer unless you compensate with incentives or strong messaging.
Goal: know when you can safely ship.
In the episode, Alexandre explains two approaches when underlying rails are not fully real-time:
Your readiness actions:
Goal: prevent “instant loss” scenarios.
Alexandre gives a concrete scenario where criminals exploit timing and move money out quickly:
“We have seen and blocked… they put money in the bank account… within minutes… they use Zelle to move the money out.”
What to do in 2026:
Goal: give customers a reason to choose it.
Alexandre offers two important adoption examples:
For ecommerce, you need a similar “why.”
Options that work without sounding gimmicky:
Your readiness actions:
Goal: avoid the “refund frustration” trap.
John highlights a truth every shopper recognizes: cards feel instant for payment, slow for refunds. Real-time rails can change that expectation, but only if your operations and provider setup can support it consistently.
Readiness actions:
Goal: make pay by bank measurable and finance-friendly.
If you cannot measure performance, you cannot scale adoption responsibly.
Readiness actions:
Goal: avoid a new set of payment silos.
John and Alexandre touch on a structural problem: pay by bank systems vary by country and do not behave like a single global network yet. If you operate globally, you will likely need multiple pay by bank providers depending on region, rails, and bank coverage.
That creates complexity fast. Orchestration is what prevents it from becoming a messy set of one-off integrations.
If you want Gr4vy’s perspective on how orchestration fits into emerging payment models, you can reference: payment orchestration for agentic commerce
Even though agentic commerce is a different topic, the core principle carries over: merchants need control across payment mechanisms without lock-in.
If your pay by bank rollout is working, you should see these outcomes:
If adoption is flat, the usual causes are predictable: unclear value for the customer, too much friction, confusing branding, or conservative limits that make the method unusable for meaningful order values.
What are pay by bank payments in ecommerce?
Pay by bank payments let customers pay directly from their bank account using bank rails rather than card networks. The user experience is typically powered by online banking or open banking authentication.
Are pay by bank payments the same as open banking payments?
In practice, the terms are often used interchangeably. “Pay by bank” is commonly used as the consumer-facing label, while “open banking payments” describes the enabling mechanism.
Why is pay by bank growing in 2026?
Two drivers are increasing adoption: improved user experience through bank authentication and the spread of real-time rails that reduce settlement delays and uncertainty.
What is the biggest barrier to pay by bank adoption in retail ecommerce?
Habit and incentives. Cards work well for consumers and often offer rewards. Many customers need a reason to switch, such as discounts, loyalty benefits, or better refund experiences.
What are the main fraud risks with pay by bank?
Fraud can include account takeover, mule activity, and social engineering. Faster settlement and limited reversibility can increase loss severity if controls are weak.
Do real-time payment limits affect ecommerce use cases?
Yes. Velocity limits can make some order values impractical. Merchants need a risk strategy that supports legitimate transactions while limiting fraud exposure.
Can pay by bank replace cards by 2026?
In some verticals, it can be the primary method. In general ecommerce, it is more likely to grow alongside cards, especially in markets where real-time rails and incentives align.
Pay by bank in ecommerce is not a single integration you “turn on.” It is a combination of user experience, risk strategy, operations, and incentives. Merchants that treat it as a checkbox will see low adoption or increased fraud. Merchants that prepare properly can reduce costs, improve payment resilience, and offer customers a faster, more direct way to pay.
Contact Gr4vy to learn how payment orchestration can help you launch and scale pay by bank payments in ecommerce for 2026.
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