The sweeping changes to reporting rules will affect all FCA-regulated entities after an initial test period.
The new requirements track vulnerable customers, and increase reporting frequency to twice yearly.
The UK's
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)
rolled out a major revamp of how financial firms report customer complaints. It
replaced five separate filing systems with a single consolidated return that
aims to improve oversight of traditional financial services firms and also
retail trading platforms.
The UK Watchdog Doubles
Reporting Burden Starting 2027
The changes
may hit licensed entities particularly hard, including FX and CFD brokers. They will be required to file complaints data every six months instead of annually and break
down issues into more detailed categories.
The
regulator wants firms to start collecting data under the new system from January
1, 2027, with the first submissions due by July 1, 2027.
Sarah Pritchard, FCA Executive Director for Supervision
“These
improvements are a significant step forward in ensuring transparency and
consistency across the sector,” said
Sarah Pritchard, Deputy Chief Executive of the FCA.
“By
streamlining returns and introducing clearer guidance, we're making it easier
for firms to provide high-quality complaints data while strengthening our
ability to protect consumers, particularly those who are most vulnerable,” she explained.
The FCA
estimates the overhaul will cost the industry around £6 million annually, up
from an initial £3.8 million projection. Individual firms face one-time
implementation costs for IT system upgrades, staff training, and process
redesigns.
For retail
brokers, this shift is generally viewed as negative, but the FCA tends to give
with one hand and take with the other. At the end of November,
FinanceMagnates.com reported that the regulator had updated reporting
requirements for more than seven billion trades, allowing
brokers to reduce their operating costs.
The
watchdog expanded product classifications with new standalone categories. The
changes aim to reduce reliance on the catch-all “Other” category, which had
grown to account for 7% of all complaints.
The
categories include a wide range of instruments, among them FX, CFDs, spread
betting, and derivatives.
In November,
the FCA had issued
a notice to CFD providers after a review showed that some firms were
falling short of the standards expected under the Consumer Duty. The duty,
introduced in July 2023, sets higher expectations for consumer protection
across the financial sector.
The FCA
claims it received strong support for scrapping group-level reporting.
Instead, each UK entity must file separately, even if they're part of the same
corporate family. That change drew some pushback over potential duplicate
counting when multiple group companies handle different parts of a single
customer complaint, but the regulator says it needs entity-level visibility to
spot problems faster.
Tracking Complaints from
Vulnerable Customers
The new
requirement forces firms to report two separate data points on vulnerable
customers. The first captures all complaints where the customer disclosed or
was identified as vulnerable, regardless of whether that vulnerability relates
to the actual complaint. The second tracks cases where the firm failed to
properly consider the customer's vulnerable status.
The FCA
cited examples including customers with gambling addictions (relevant for
high-risk CFD traders), those in financial hardship, or people with cognitive
impairments. Firms can use disclosed vulnerabilities or system-generated
indicators to flag these cases. The regulator won't publish this data but will
use it for supervisory reviews.
All firms
now report on a calendar-year basis with data due for periods ending June 30
and December 31. That replaces the old system tied to each company's accounting
reference date, which created staggered deadlines throughout the year.
The FCA
says it needs more frequent data to identify emerging consumer harm and market
trends faster.
Companies
with accounting dates that don't align with the new calendar system will file a
short-period return covering the gap between their last ARD-based submission
and December 31, 2026. After that, everyone moves to the standardized schedule.
Firm-level
data gets published only when a company logs 500 or more complaints in a
six-month period. That threshold applies across all sectors, despite some
consultation feedback suggesting different levels for different industries
(50–100 for funeral plans, 250 for consumer credit, 500 for banks and
insurers).
Separate AI Initiative
Launched Same Day
The FCA also
announced on Wednesday that eight firms including NatWest, Monzo, Santander,
and Scottish Widows joined the first cohort of its AI Live Testing initiative.
The program helps companies deploy artificial intelligence in live UK financial
markets with regulatory oversight.
Participating
firms work with the FCA's technical partner Advai to develop evaluation
frameworks and risk management protocols for AI applications. Use cases focus
on retail financial services including debt resolution, financial advice,
customer engagement, complaints handling, and spending guidance.
Applications
for a second AI testing cohort open in January 2026, with participants starting
in April. The regulator says it is avoiding new AI-specific regulations and is instead applying existing rules to the technology.
The UK's
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)
rolled out a major revamp of how financial firms report customer complaints. It
replaced five separate filing systems with a single consolidated return that
aims to improve oversight of traditional financial services firms and also
retail trading platforms.
The UK Watchdog Doubles
Reporting Burden Starting 2027
The changes
may hit licensed entities particularly hard, including FX and CFD brokers. They will be required to file complaints data every six months instead of annually and break
down issues into more detailed categories.
The
regulator wants firms to start collecting data under the new system from January
1, 2027, with the first submissions due by July 1, 2027.
Sarah Pritchard, FCA Executive Director for Supervision
“These
improvements are a significant step forward in ensuring transparency and
consistency across the sector,” said
Sarah Pritchard, Deputy Chief Executive of the FCA.
“By
streamlining returns and introducing clearer guidance, we're making it easier
for firms to provide high-quality complaints data while strengthening our
ability to protect consumers, particularly those who are most vulnerable,” she explained.
The FCA
estimates the overhaul will cost the industry around £6 million annually, up
from an initial £3.8 million projection. Individual firms face one-time
implementation costs for IT system upgrades, staff training, and process
redesigns.
For retail
brokers, this shift is generally viewed as negative, but the FCA tends to give
with one hand and take with the other. At the end of November,
FinanceMagnates.com reported that the regulator had updated reporting
requirements for more than seven billion trades, allowing
brokers to reduce their operating costs.
The
watchdog expanded product classifications with new standalone categories. The
changes aim to reduce reliance on the catch-all “Other” category, which had
grown to account for 7% of all complaints.
The
categories include a wide range of instruments, among them FX, CFDs, spread
betting, and derivatives.
In November,
the FCA had issued
a notice to CFD providers after a review showed that some firms were
falling short of the standards expected under the Consumer Duty. The duty,
introduced in July 2023, sets higher expectations for consumer protection
across the financial sector.
The FCA
claims it received strong support for scrapping group-level reporting.
Instead, each UK entity must file separately, even if they're part of the same
corporate family. That change drew some pushback over potential duplicate
counting when multiple group companies handle different parts of a single
customer complaint, but the regulator says it needs entity-level visibility to
spot problems faster.
Tracking Complaints from
Vulnerable Customers
The new
requirement forces firms to report two separate data points on vulnerable
customers. The first captures all complaints where the customer disclosed or
was identified as vulnerable, regardless of whether that vulnerability relates
to the actual complaint. The second tracks cases where the firm failed to
properly consider the customer's vulnerable status.
The FCA
cited examples including customers with gambling addictions (relevant for
high-risk CFD traders), those in financial hardship, or people with cognitive
impairments. Firms can use disclosed vulnerabilities or system-generated
indicators to flag these cases. The regulator won't publish this data but will
use it for supervisory reviews.
All firms
now report on a calendar-year basis with data due for periods ending June 30
and December 31. That replaces the old system tied to each company's accounting
reference date, which created staggered deadlines throughout the year.
The FCA
says it needs more frequent data to identify emerging consumer harm and market
trends faster.
Companies
with accounting dates that don't align with the new calendar system will file a
short-period return covering the gap between their last ARD-based submission
and December 31, 2026. After that, everyone moves to the standardized schedule.
Firm-level
data gets published only when a company logs 500 or more complaints in a
six-month period. That threshold applies across all sectors, despite some
consultation feedback suggesting different levels for different industries
(50–100 for funeral plans, 250 for consumer credit, 500 for banks and
insurers).
Separate AI Initiative
Launched Same Day
The FCA also
announced on Wednesday that eight firms including NatWest, Monzo, Santander,
and Scottish Widows joined the first cohort of its AI Live Testing initiative.
The program helps companies deploy artificial intelligence in live UK financial
markets with regulatory oversight.
Participating
firms work with the FCA's technical partner Advai to develop evaluation
frameworks and risk management protocols for AI applications. Use cases focus
on retail financial services including debt resolution, financial advice,
customer engagement, complaints handling, and spending guidance.
Applications
for a second AI testing cohort open in January 2026, with participants starting
in April. The regulator says it is avoiding new AI-specific regulations and is instead applying existing rules to the technology.
Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch.
Education:
MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics
LCG UK Slides into Losses as Revenue Drops 18% and Expenses Rise in 2025
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