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From 19 March 2026 the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is allowing banks and payment providers with strong fraud controls to amend limits for contactless payments on cards.
Most consumers will however not see immediate changes, but the update gives firms flexibility to adjust limits in future.
Contactless debit and credit cards are currently subject to these limits:
In December 2025, the FCA announced that banks and payment providers with strong fraud controls would be given flexibility over contactless payment limits.
As the FCA noted, most banks are likely to maintain their existing contactless limits for the time being. Any changes will be communicated to customers.
Separate changes would also need to be made to card acceptance terminals and the industry rules that govern them to process contactless card payments above £100.
This means that customers are unlikely to see any immediate change to how they currently make contactless card payments.
This does not impact mobile payments (e.g. Apple/Google Pay) which will continue to operate without a fixed £100 limit.
Higher payments though mobile wallets are possible because the phone verifies your identity, for example via Face ID or a thumbprint. The verification is required for all mobile payments regardless of value.
As of December 2025, our data showed that:
Existing consumer protections remain in place.
All customers are protected from unauthorised fraud, including where their card has been stolen and used via contactless.
The fraud rate on contactless cards is very low.
Customers should get in contact with their card provider as soon as they realise their card has been lost or stolen.
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