Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

04/07/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/07/2026 14:06

New Fed Data: Number and Value of Payments for Largest DIs 2015 to 2022

New Fed Data: Number and Value of Payments for Largest DIs 2015 to 2022

April 07, 2026

Claire Greene Center Director

The Federal Reserve Payments Study has released new data detailing the annual payments activity of the largest depository institutions (Top 100 DIs) in the US from 2015 through 2022. This is the first time that aggregate volumes for the Top 100 DIs (comprising 85 commercial banks, five savings institutions, and 10 credit unions) have been published, making this dataset a unique look into how customers of the largest DIs in the banking system move money.

Covering a time when payments changed rapidly, the eight-year period includes the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic. The number and value of three major clearing and settlement systems in the United States are included: check, automated clearing house (ACH), and wire.

For the Top 100 DIs from 2015 to 2022:

  • ACH transfers grew fastest by value
  • In 2022, wire transfers constituted most payments by value
  • Wire transfers grew fastest by number
  • In 2022, ACH debits constituted most payments by number

ACH transfers grew fastest by value

From 2015 to 2022, the value of ACH debit transfers increased 186 percent per year, ACH credits increased 180 percent per year, and wire transfers 129 percent per year. Even the value of check payments increased 21 percent each year.

Source: Federal Reserve Payments Study, DFIPS (CY 2015-2022), Figure 1.

In 2022, wire transfers constituted most payments by value

The wire transfer systems-the Clearing House Interbank Payments System (CHIPS) and Fedwire, operated by the Federal Reserve Banks-mostly handle monetary settlement transfers between financial institutions and large-value payments by businesses. That's why, by value, wire transfers dominate ACH and check payments at Top 100 banks.

At Top 100 DIs in 2022, wires accounted for 90 percent of the sum of wire, ACH, and check payments by value. ACH credit transfers were 6 percent, ACH debits, 4 percent, and checks, 1 percent (with rounding).

Source: Federal Reserve Payments Study, DFIPS (CY 2015-2022), Figure 2.

Wire transfers grew fastest by number

From 2015 to 2022, the number of wire transfers originated increased 171 percent per year, ACH debits increased 149 percent and ACH credits, 115 percent. Checks paid declined 52 percent per year over the period.

Source: Federal Reserve Payments Study, DFIPS (CY 2015-2022), Figure 3.

In 2022, ACH constituted almost 80 percent of payments by number

At Top 100 DIs in 2022, ACH transfers accounted for 78 percent of payments. ACH debit transfers were 41 percent by number, ACH credits, 38 percent, checks, 20 percent, and wires, 1 percent.

Source: Federal Reserve Payments Study, DFIPS (CY 2015-2022), Figure 4.

You can see and download this data and the accompanying "Notes on the Top 100 Data, DFIPS (CY 2015-2022)" at Federal Reserve Board Federal Reserve Payments Study (FRPS).

The release also includes alternative payments initiated via bank web sites or apps (bank bill pay and person-to-person [P2P]). In addition, for triennial years when nationally representative samples are available (2015, 2018, and 2021), the release provides breakouts of aggregate total volumes with the volumes attributed to the largest DIs and all other DIs.

Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta published this content on April 07, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on April 07, 2026 at 20:06 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]