FCA Probe Into Mastercard, PayPal and Visa Puts Digital Wallet Competition Risk in Focus
6th May 2026
What the FCA Investigation Means
The FCA’s investigation into Mastercard, PayPal and Visa has put a spotlight on a part of digital payments most customers never see: the rules, incentives and commercial terms that sit behind a wallet transaction.
The Financial Conduct Authority has confirmed that it is investigating Mastercard, PayPal and Visa under Chapter I of the Competition Act 1998, and Mastercard and Visa under Chapter II, over suspected anti-competitive conduct linked to the funding and usage of PayPal’s digital wallet.
The FCA has reached no conclusions and made no findings that competition law has been broken. This is an investigation, not a judgment. For banks, payment firms, card schemes, wallet providers and fintech partners, the practical question is straightforward: can they explain why wallet funding options, routing rules, incentives and payment restrictions are designed the way they are?
If the answer is unclear, the risk is not only legal. It is a governance problem.
Announcement in Brief
The FCA confirmed the investigation after PayPal Holdings Inc published financial reporting. The regulator has identified the companies involved and the legal framework being used, but it has not disclosed the specific conduct, agreements, market definition, time period or commercial mechanisms under review.
That limited disclosure is important. Firms should not infer liability, motives or market impact from the announcement alone.
But the investigation still sends a clear signal to the payments sector. Digital wallet arrangements are no longer just product design, customer experience or commercial partnership issues. Where they affect payment funding, usage, routing, access or incentives, they can become competition-law issues.
What Is Known So Far
The confirmed facts are narrow.
The FCA is investigating suspected anti-competitive conduct linked to the funding and usage of PayPal’s digital wallet. Mastercard, PayPal and Visa are named under Chapter I. Mastercard and Visa are named under Chapter II. The FCA has made no finding that competition law has been broken.
A large amount remains unknown. The FCA has not explained the conduct theory, the relevant market, the role of any agreement, or whether the concern relates to fees, incentives, access, usage rules, routing logic or another feature of wallet funding.
That uncertainty should shape how firms respond. Board papers, risk registers and investor-facing material should stick closely to the known facts. Overstating an investigation can create a separate governance problem by turning speculation into the firm’s internal record.
The Competition-Law Angle
Chapter I of the Competition Act 1998 concerns anti-competitive agreements and concerted practices. Chapter II concerns abuse of a dominant position.
Those references move the issue beyond ordinary payment product compliance. The question is not simply whether a digital wallet works, whether the customer journey is smooth, or whether the payment system is operationally resilient.
The harder question is whether the rules behind the wallet restrict competition, steer usage unfairly, limit access or reinforce market power.
That is where the real risk sits. Not on the payment button. In the funding rules, card-scheme relationships, fees, incentives and routing decisions behind it.
Why Digital Wallets Carry Competition Risk
Digital wallets sit between consumers, banks, merchants, card schemes and payment platforms. That position gives them commercial power.
A small change in a default funding source, a fee arrangement, a rebate, a merchant rule or a preferred payment route can alter who receives transaction volume, who pays more, and how much real choice customers and merchants have.
That is why wallet design can be competition-sensitive. The risk does not have to come from an obvious exclusion or dramatic restriction. It can sit inside ordinary-looking commercial terms that influence how payments flow.
For firms, the test is simple: if a wallet arrangement affects access, pricing, usage, routing or choice, it needs competition-law scrutiny before it is approved.
What Payment Firms Should Check
The first step is to identify where wallet arrangements influence behaviour.
That means looking at how transactions are funded, how card networks or payment routes are selected, whether customers are nudged towards particular methods, whether merchants face limits, and whether incentives change usage patterns.
The second step is to test the audit trail. A strong record should explain:
why the arrangement exists;
who approved it;
whether legal and compliance teams reviewed it;
whether customer and merchant effects were considered;
whether Chapter I or Chapter II risk was assessed.
The weakest position is not having a complex wallet arrangement. It is having one that nobody can properly explain after the event.
Common Governance Weak Spots
The FCA announcement should prompt firms to look for gaps between legal, product, commercial and technology teams.
Commercial teams may agree incentives before competition review. Product teams may alter routing rules as a technical change. Senior committees may approve wallet partnerships based on growth, conversion or cost savings without addressing customer choice or merchant flexibility.
That is how competition risk often builds: not through one dramatic decision, but through separate choices that nobody joins together.
A payment-routing change, funding rule or usage incentive can look routine in isolation. Once it affects access, choice or transaction flow, it becomes a board-level governance issue.
Wider Implications for the Payments Sector
The investigation is a signal, not a finding. But it confirms that digital wallet economics can attract formal competition scrutiny.
That matters beyond PayPal’s wallet. Any business involved in payment acceptance, wallet design, card funding, merchant arrangements or customer payment choice should assume that regulators may look beneath the customer-facing product and examine the commercial rules underneath.
For boards and risk committees, the question is simple. Can the firm show who approved the wallet terms, why the incentives were used, and how competition risk was assessed before launch?
If not, the firm has a documentation gap before it has a legal defence.
What Firms Should Do Now
Firms should map wallet-related arrangements involving card funding, payment routing, merchant terms, default settings, incentives or limits on payment choice.
They should then review whether those arrangements were assessed by legal, compliance, product and commercial teams before implementation. Approval papers should record the commercial rationale, the competition-law review and any customer or merchant impact.
Future wallet and card-scheme approvals should include a competition-risk check where arrangements affect access, pricing, usage or routing. That does not make every payment decision high risk. It makes the process clearer when a decision genuinely is.
The FCA has not found that competition law was broken. But the message for the payments sector is clear enough: digital wallet risk often lives below the surface, in the commercial rules that decide how payments actually move.
Source Details
This article is based only on the FCA announcement confirming an investigation into Mastercard, PayPal and Visa under Chapter I of the Competition Act 1998, and Mastercard and Visa under Chapter II, for suspected anti-competitive conduct linked to the funding and usage of PayPal’s digital wallet.
The FCA has stated that it has reached no conclusions and made no findings that competition law has been broken.
More from Finance Monthly: FCA Arrests Show Why Investment Adverts Can Put Your Money at Risk