Amid constant speculation about the future of payments technology, the ACH Network had its best year yet. The ACH Network processed more transactions, moved higher dollar values, and established more use cases for businesses and consumers. With new initiatives on the way designed to increase security and foster innovation, the ACH Network’s impressive growth could just be beginning.
In a recent PaymentsJournal podcast, Michael Herd, Executive Vice President of ACH Network Administration at Nacha, and Elisa Tavilla, Director of Debit Payments at Javelin Strategy & Research, discussed the growth areas for the ACH Network, the continued rise of Same Day ACH, and the future of the platform.
Milestone Growth
The ACH Network is a firmly established payment network that connects to nearly every U.S. bank account, making last year’s growth even more impressive. In 2024, the ACH Network added more than 2 billion payments to its annual volume, reaching a total of 33.6 billion payments. ACH’s 6.7% growth rate significantly outpaced the previous year’s 4.8% increase.
The scope and scale of the ACH Network are highlighted by its remarkable dollar volume: more than $86 trillion was moved on the ACH Network last year, representing a 7.5% year-over-year increase.
Nacha also reported that consumers are increasingly making bill payments and account transfers online. In fact, online ACH payments grew by 8.4% last year to exceed 10.7 billion payments, making it the single largest category of ACH payments.
The second-largest growth area for ACH was business-to-business payments, which increased by 11.6% in 2024, reaching a total of 7.4 billion payments. Within this segment are healthcare claim payments, where insurers compensate medical providers, including doctors, dentists and hospitals. This category grew by roughly 5%, surpassing 500 million payments.
“The third-highest growth area was Direct Deposit transactions, which have been the bread-and-butter ACH transactions over the years,” Herd said. “That includes payroll, benefit payments, and other types of consumer payments. We continue to see growth in that segment at 8.6 billion payments, which was a 3.7% year-over-year increase. Overall, there was across-the-board growth in anything that begins life electronically and digitally, and a sharp decline in anything that started off based on a paper check.”
Renewed Interest
The declining usage of checks accelerated during the pandemic, when staffing an office to issue, receive, and deposit high volumes of checks became a challenge. Since then, there hasn’t been a reversion to paper checks, even among small businesses. Security, cost, and convenience concerns have driven the shift to alternative payment methods.
“Several retailers stopped accepting paper checks in their stores last year, including Target and Petco,” Tavilla said. “Primarily, this is because there’s very low consumer demand to pay with checks anymore. More retailers are offering decoupled debit or their private label debit cards, which the consumer can use to pay with funds from their checking account, and they can also take advantage of rewards and loyalty incentives that are offered by that retailer.”
For years, large mobile carriers like Verizon, T-Mobile and AT&T have offered autopay discounts to incentivize their customers to move away from paper payments in favor of ACH. In addition, the ongoing push for eco-friendly, low-cost solutions has spurred interest in one of the original ACH use cases: recurring bill payments.
“We’ve seen interest in recurring ACH for things like donations and subscriptions, where you have a repeat payment scenario between a known payer and payee that looks a lot like a bill payment,” Herd said. “It’s not quite literally paying a bill, but the payment characteristics look almost exactly like it. That’s a sweet spot for recurring ACH debit in those use cases.”
The peer-to-peer space is another area of growth for ACH. Many P2P users fund their accounts using ACH rails, and several platforms use the ACH Network as their infrastructure. As these services have gained adoption, there has been corresponding growth in ACH usage.
A Lighter Lift
For all of last year’s success, the most significant news from 2024 was the rapid adoption of Same Day ACH. For the first time, total Same Day ACH payment volume surpassed a billion payments for the year—a 45% year-over-year increase.
Roughly 20% of all new ACH payment volume is same-day payments, and Same Day ACH is being utilized in many of the same use cases as standard ACH. There has been volume growth in consumer online payments like bill payments, account transfers, wallet loads, and in B2B transactions.
“It’s no surprise to see such significant growth this past year, the most to date,” Tavilla said. “ACH is already ubiquitous, so all the financial institutions who can currently send and receive standard next-day ACH can also easily accept Same Day ACH, making it a relatively lighter lift. The infrastructure is in place operationally and the financial institutions are already enabled to do that, so I anticipate that the growth will continue in both volume and value going forward.”
Though there has been speculation that faster payments will eventually eclipse more conventional payments, a more likely scenario is that both payment methods will continue to flourish. Depending on the use case, not every payment must be same-day or instant. Many of the core ACH use cases like payroll or bill payment are scheduled payments with known due dates and counterparties, and there may not be a good rationale for utilizing same-day settlement capabilities.
“Even within a standard use case area like payroll, you’ll have cases like payroll errors or payments to temporary workers, hourly workers, and gig workers, where it does make sense to take advantage of faster settlement speeds,” Herd said. “In bill payment, you may have bills that are late or overdue and service is scheduled to be cut off. These are one-off use cases where it may make sense to take advantage of a faster settlement speed.”
Areas of Focus
In addition to driving standard and Same Day ACH adoption, Nacha has three areas of focus for the upcoming year. The first is risk management. The organization’s members adopted a new set of rules that are designed to reduce the growing prevalence of credit push fraud, such as business email compromise.
These rules will require a base level of transaction monitoring on all parties in the ACH Network, except for consumers. While the major provisions won’t go into effect until 2026, Herd recommended that ACH Network participants, including financial institutions, work on implementing their protocols this year to be compliant when the rules go into effect.
A second area of focus is a pay-by-bank project created within Nacha’s Payments Innovation Alliance membership program. Pay-by-bank has become a common industry term over the past several years, but there’s no commonly agreed upon definition among industry stakeholders.
“There is also virtually no consumer recognition of the term, even though consumers are seemingly willing to use and link their bank accounts to make payments and conduct transfers,” Herd said. “The project is intended to forge a participant consensus on what pay-by-bank actually means, to describe use cases, and to identify any novel risks that pay-by-bank transactions might present.”
The last initiative will expand the capabilities for account validation services that Nacha provides through Phixius, their information network. These services can help financial institutions and their customers comply with the Nacha account validation rules for Internet-initiated payments.
“That can help with de-risking ACH payments for a wide variety of use cases, including validating vendor counterparties in the B2B space, and even in payroll in validating accounts for payroll Direct Deposit,” Herd said. “Watch this space this year for news and announcements about the expansion of Phixius account validation services.”