FCA Pulls Investment Apps Into Open Finance Net With 2030 Roadmap

Tuesday, 14/04/2026 | 06:16 GMT by Damian Chmiel
  • The new plan lands as the EU's FIDA file remains stuck in trilogue and Washington's open banking rule sits in legal limbo.
Website of The Financial Conduct Authority or FCA, a financial regulatory body in the United Kingdom

The UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) today (Tuesday) laid out a four-year roadmap for open finance, signaling that secure financial data sharing in Britain will move beyond payments and into investments, mortgages, savings and small business credit by the end of the decade.

Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)

FCA Pushes Open Finance Beyond Payments, Eyeing Investments

The plan, published as a vision document rather than a rulebook, sets out a sequence of sprints, taskforces and consultations between now and 2030. The FCA said it would start with two priority use cases, namely helping small businesses access credit faster and giving consumers richer tools to manage and shop for mortgages.

A discussion paper on the first formal open finance scheme is due in the fourth quarter of 2026, with options for a longer-term regulatory framework to be developed with HM Treasury through 2027.

David Geale, Executive Director of Payments and Digital Finance at FCA
David Geale, Executive Director of Payments and Digital Finance at FCA

David Geale, the FCA's executive director for payments and digital finance, said open finance had "the potential to transform how people interact with financial services" by giving consumers and businesses more control over their data and helping them "access credit, secure better deals and receive more customised support."

The roadmap builds on the FCA's earlier work with the Joint Regulatory Oversight Committee on the next phase of UK open banking, which the regulator said now has roughly 17 million users, or close to one in three UK adults.

Investment Apps Pulled Into the Frame

While the SME lending and mortgage angles dominate the headlines, one of the four use cases the FCA chose to illustrate the document deals directly with retail investing. In the example, a customer connects current account, savings and credit data to a fintech investment app, which then runs a suitability check and recommends products and monthly contribution levels.

That puts wealth-tech platforms and retail brokers in the same regulatory conversation that has, until now, mostly belonged to banks and payment firms.

The roadmap names savings, investments and pensions among the products in scope, alongside insurance, credit and debt management. Mastercard and Saxo Bank already operate an open banking funding flow for investment accounts in Denmark that the two firms say lifted new fund inflows by 20%, an early signal of how data-sharing pipes can feed retail brokerage businesses.

How the UK Compares With Brussels and Washington

Britain is moving forward while peer regulators are either stalled or backtracking, which gives the FCA roadmap its main competitive significance.

In the European Union, the Financial Data Access regulation, known as FIDA, remains in trilogue negotiations, with adoption expected in the first half of 2026 and a phased implementation unlikely to start before 2027. Member states have spent months arguing over scope, big tech access and timelines, with France and Germany pushing for a narrower version focused on individuals and SMEs and excluding gatekeepers under the Digital Markets Act.

The picture in the United States is messier. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Section 1033 personal financial data rights rule, finalized in October 2024 with the largest banks scheduled to comply from April 1, 2026, is now in legal limbo. The bureau's current leadership filed to vacate the rule last year, then opened a fresh rulemaking process in August 2025 to rewrite it, and a federal court has blocked enforcement while the agency works on a replacement.

JPMorgan Chase has separately moved to charge data aggregators for access to customer information, a step fintechs and the Financial Data and Technology Association have publicly opposed.

Canada, by contrast, is implementing its own consumer-driven banking framework in phases under the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada, although core elements remain works in progress.

Agentic AI Hook

Adam Jackson, the CSO at Innovate Finance
Adam Jackson, the CSO at Innovate Finance

Innovate Finance, a UK fintech lobby, framed open finance as a precondition for the next wave of automated financial services.

Adam Jackson, the group's chief strategy officer, said open finance could "be a foundation for widespread adoption of agentic AI," referring to AI systems that make decisions and execute transactions on a user's behalf. The FCA roadmap echoes the framing, saying broader data could allow agents to make "informed, personalized decisions" and execute transactions for users.

The regulator cited McKinsey research suggesting open finance could generate up to 1% to 1.5% of UK GDP by 2030, and pointed to a separate Open Banking Limited and EY estimate that the combined economic impact of open banking and open finance could reach £7.4 billion a year within five years. Both figures, the FCA noted, depend on adoption rates that have yet to materialize.

The FCA, which is also working through a separate consultation on its long-awaited cryptoasset authorization regime, said it would publish updates from its TechSprints, PolicySprint and PRISM taskforce through 2026 before moving into framework design in 2027.

The UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) today (Tuesday) laid out a four-year roadmap for open finance, signaling that secure financial data sharing in Britain will move beyond payments and into investments, mortgages, savings and small business credit by the end of the decade.

Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)

FCA Pushes Open Finance Beyond Payments, Eyeing Investments

The plan, published as a vision document rather than a rulebook, sets out a sequence of sprints, taskforces and consultations between now and 2030. The FCA said it would start with two priority use cases, namely helping small businesses access credit faster and giving consumers richer tools to manage and shop for mortgages.

A discussion paper on the first formal open finance scheme is due in the fourth quarter of 2026, with options for a longer-term regulatory framework to be developed with HM Treasury through 2027.

David Geale, Executive Director of Payments and Digital Finance at FCA
David Geale, Executive Director of Payments and Digital Finance at FCA

David Geale, the FCA's executive director for payments and digital finance, said open finance had "the potential to transform how people interact with financial services" by giving consumers and businesses more control over their data and helping them "access credit, secure better deals and receive more customised support."

The roadmap builds on the FCA's earlier work with the Joint Regulatory Oversight Committee on the next phase of UK open banking, which the regulator said now has roughly 17 million users, or close to one in three UK adults.

Investment Apps Pulled Into the Frame

While the SME lending and mortgage angles dominate the headlines, one of the four use cases the FCA chose to illustrate the document deals directly with retail investing. In the example, a customer connects current account, savings and credit data to a fintech investment app, which then runs a suitability check and recommends products and monthly contribution levels.

That puts wealth-tech platforms and retail brokers in the same regulatory conversation that has, until now, mostly belonged to banks and payment firms.

The roadmap names savings, investments and pensions among the products in scope, alongside insurance, credit and debt management. Mastercard and Saxo Bank already operate an open banking funding flow for investment accounts in Denmark that the two firms say lifted new fund inflows by 20%, an early signal of how data-sharing pipes can feed retail brokerage businesses.

How the UK Compares With Brussels and Washington

Britain is moving forward while peer regulators are either stalled or backtracking, which gives the FCA roadmap its main competitive significance.

In the European Union, the Financial Data Access regulation, known as FIDA, remains in trilogue negotiations, with adoption expected in the first half of 2026 and a phased implementation unlikely to start before 2027. Member states have spent months arguing over scope, big tech access and timelines, with France and Germany pushing for a narrower version focused on individuals and SMEs and excluding gatekeepers under the Digital Markets Act.

The picture in the United States is messier. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Section 1033 personal financial data rights rule, finalized in October 2024 with the largest banks scheduled to comply from April 1, 2026, is now in legal limbo. The bureau's current leadership filed to vacate the rule last year, then opened a fresh rulemaking process in August 2025 to rewrite it, and a federal court has blocked enforcement while the agency works on a replacement.

JPMorgan Chase has separately moved to charge data aggregators for access to customer information, a step fintechs and the Financial Data and Technology Association have publicly opposed.

Canada, by contrast, is implementing its own consumer-driven banking framework in phases under the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada, although core elements remain works in progress.

Agentic AI Hook

Adam Jackson, the CSO at Innovate Finance
Adam Jackson, the CSO at Innovate Finance

Innovate Finance, a UK fintech lobby, framed open finance as a precondition for the next wave of automated financial services.

Adam Jackson, the group's chief strategy officer, said open finance could "be a foundation for widespread adoption of agentic AI," referring to AI systems that make decisions and execute transactions on a user's behalf. The FCA roadmap echoes the framing, saying broader data could allow agents to make "informed, personalized decisions" and execute transactions for users.

The regulator cited McKinsey research suggesting open finance could generate up to 1% to 1.5% of UK GDP by 2030, and pointed to a separate Open Banking Limited and EY estimate that the combined economic impact of open banking and open finance could reach £7.4 billion a year within five years. Both figures, the FCA noted, depend on adoption rates that have yet to materialize.

The FCA, which is also working through a separate consultation on its long-awaited cryptoasset authorization regime, said it would publish updates from its TechSprints, PolicySprint and PRISM taskforce through 2026 before moving into framework design in 2027.

About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel
  • 3440 Articles
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About the Author: Damian Chmiel
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
  • 3440 Articles
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