Real-Time Gross Settlement (RTGS)
Real-Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) is a payment system in which banks transfer funds to one another instantly and individually. Transactions are settled in real time and on a gross (one-by-one) basis, making them final and irrevocable once processed. RTGS is primarily used for high-value, time-critical interbank transfers and is typically operated by a country’s central bank.
Key takeaways
- RTGS settles each transaction individually and immediately; once settled, payments are final and cannot be reversed.
- It’s used mainly for large-value interbank transfers and helps minimize settlement (delivery) risk.
- Central banks manage RTGS systems by adjusting account balances electronically—no physical exchange of funds is required.
- RTGS reduces the time window that payment data is exposed to risk, but it can require more liquidity and incur higher fees than netted systems.
How RTGS works
- Real-time: settlement occurs as soon as a payment instruction is received and authenticated.
- Gross settlement: each payment is processed and settled on its own instead of being bundled with others.
- Central bank accounting: the central bank debits the sender bank’s reserve account and credits the receiver bank’s reserve account electronically.
- Finality: settled payments are irreversible, reducing counterparty and systemic risk associated with delayed settlement.
Examples and history
- Fedwire (U.S.) — an early system that evolved into an RTGS-style service starting in the 1970s.
- CHAPS (U.K.) — operated by the Bank of England for high-value sterling payments.
- TARGET2 (Eurozone) — the Trans-European Automated Real-time Gross Settlement Express Transfer system used across participating countries.
Many other countries operate RTGS systems to support safe, high-value interbank payments.
RTGS vs. net settlement systems
- Net settlement (e.g., ACH/Bacs): transactions are accumulated during the day and settled later as a single net position, which is cost-efficient but exposes participants to settlement risk until the netting occurs.
- RTGS: processes and settles individual transactions immediately, eliminating end-of-day netting risk but requiring more intraday liquidity and often higher per-transaction costs.
Advantages
- Immediate finality reduces settlement and systemic risk.
- Shorter exposure window for cyber and fraud risks—sensitive payment data is vulnerable for less time.
- Greater certainty for large-value or time-critical transactions.
- Supports financial stability by preventing buildup of unsettled obligations.
Trade-offs and practical considerations
- Liquidity requirements: banks must have sufficient intraday liquidity to settle payments individually.
- Cost: RTGS transactions can be more expensive than netted alternatives; fees vary by country and institution and may sometimes be waived.
- Not necessary for low-value, non-urgent payments—those are often routed via slower, cheaper net settlement systems.
Typical use cases
- High-value interbank transfers
- Time-critical corporate payments (e.g., large corporate settlements, securities settlement legs)
- Situations where finality and minimized counterparty risk are essential
Conclusion
RTGS is a core infrastructure for modern banking that enables immediate, irrevocable settlement of large-value payments. By processing each transaction in real time, RTGS greatly reduces settlement risk and supports financial-system stability, but it requires more intraday liquidity and can cost more than net-settlement alternatives. Organizations choose RTGS when immediacy and finality outweigh the additional liquidity and cost considerations.