VoP goes live – and millions of EU businesses aren’t ready


A quiet revolution has just landed in Europe. And whether your business sends or receives euros, every payment you make is about to get a little smarter.
On October 9, 2025, the EU Verification of Beneficiary (VoP) mandate was officially activated. Every euro payment must now pass a nominative check: the name of the account holder must match the IBAN (international bank account number) before the money leaves your account.
Responsible for Product Management at Tribe Payments.
This may seem like a minor adjustment, but it is a major weapon against one of the fastest growing frauds in Europe: Authorized Push Payment (APP) scams – where criminals trick individuals and finance teams within businesses into sending money to accounts that appear legitimate but are not.
In 2024, APP fraud cost EU businesses more than €2.4 billion, with France, Germany and the Netherlands seeing double-digit year-on-year increases. In the UK, losses reached £459.7 million, with APP scams accounting for 76% of all fraud by volume.
A new checkpoint for every euro moved
VoP adds a speed bump to your payment flows. Every supplier invoice, contractor payment and cross-border transfer can trigger a real-time mismatch alert if the name does not fully match that of the intended recipient.
Think of it as a bouncer for your money: only the right account goes through. It is the EU’s response to misdirected and fraudulent payments, particularly invoice scams in which fraudsters pose as legitimate suppliers.
The concept is not entirely new. The UK introduced its own Confirmation of Beneficiary (CoP) system in 2020, which quickly reduced losses from fraud.
But while the UK has been gradually rolling out its rollout, allowing banks and payment providers to gradually join, the European version is mandatory from day one. Around 3,000 eurozone banks, PSPs and fintechs are expected to comply immediately.
VoP controls apply to both SEPA credit transfers (SCT) and SEPA instant credit transfers (SCT Inst). So whether you’re paying your payroll in bulk or sending funds instantly, your money now has to prove who it’s for.
Why your finance teams should pay attention
Many businesses won’t notice VoP until a payment triggers an alert. When this is the case, it is important:
Stop invoice fraud – fake accounts payable are flagged before payments leave your business;
Detect costly mistakes – a wrong number in an IBAN can misappropriate funds; VoP adds a crucial verification step preventing funds from being sent into a financial black hole;
Reduce disputes – acting on alerts simplifies conversations about liability with banks;
Building supplier trust – knowing that money is reaching the right people, thereby improving cash flow transparency;
Safer integration – new suppliers are verified, reducing the risk of onboarding fraud.
Of course, not every mismatch necessarily equates to fraud. A missing accent, abbreviated company name, or the difference between “Ltd” and “Limited” can also trigger alerts. This makes clear and consistent data just as important as the technology itself.
Businesses will need to ensure that supplier records are accurate and consistent, and be prepared to explain to customers or partners why a payment may be delayed for verification. Inconsistent naming can erode trust in the system, especially if alerts are frequent or unexplained.
SMEs without dedicated anti-fraud teams particularly benefit, as a single fraudulent transfer can freeze cash flow for weeks.
Why awareness is so low
Despite its scale, VoP arrived quietly. Banks and payment service providers have focused first on implementation, ensuring that the technical and compliance elements are in place. But that means VoP is being enabled without much fanfare for businesses.
Awareness is particularly low among companies located outside the eurozone, even if they make payments denominated in euros. So British businesses don’t die out. Even if you already use CoP, VoP applies to any Euro payments you make or any payments to EU suppliers via SEPA.
And unlike CoP, VoP is mandatory across the bloc, with no opt-in period, so UK businesses need to ensure their systems, staff and payment partners can interpret and respond to alerts.
A little friction can save millions
VoP does not automatically block payments. This adds a layer of friction designed to prevent fraud, not slow down commerce. This friction matters. This forces a decision point: check, delay, or continue.
For banks and PSPs, the challenge is technical: performing checks in real time without slowing down transactions or disrupting the customer experience. For businesses, it’s behavioral.
A “close match” could be harmless…a nickname or abbreviation…or it could be a sign of a scam. Training staff to make a difference will be as important as the technology itself.
Bridging the trust gap
VoP is a trust enhancement built into every transaction. By integrating account name verification, the EU has effectively added an anti-fraud firewall to the payment source.
And with billions lost to scams every year, it’s a small friction with potentially huge potential.
The question: is your business ready?
We list the best payment gateways.
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