Wero, an A2A digital wallet from the European Payment Initiative (EPI), aims to (eventually) provide a pan-European instant payment solution as an alternative to foreign-owned schemes. Initially launched in Germany, France, and Belgium for P2P payments, it will soon expand to include POS and e-commerce, and seeks to prioritize trust, efficiency, and adaptability for diverse stakeholders across Europe.
Wero utilizes the SEPA Instant Credit Transfer protocol and existing account-to-account (A2A) rails to enable rapid funds transfers between users' bank accounts. With Wero, users can send and receive money within 10 seconds using a phone number, email address, or app-generated QR code. Since its launch in July 2024, Wero has gained 14 million users and processed 8 million transactions in live markets (as of November 2024)[1].
EPI, a joint venture between 14 European banks, has alluded to several goals to transform the European payments landscape:
To date, Wero has launched in Germany, France, and Belgium and currently supports only P2P (peer-to-peer) transactions. In 2025, EPI plans to expand Wero's geographic reach to additional EU member states, starting with the Netherlands, and to introduce C2B (consumer-to-business) use cases. Future developments on the roadmap include Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL), loyalty programs, recurring payments, and more.
Figure 2 illustrates the process of a Wero P2P transaction through the BNP Paribas mobile banking app in France. Once Wero is activated within the app, users can select a recipient from their contact list, if the recipient has also activated Wero in their banking app. To complete the transaction, the user enters the payment amount and authorizes it within the app, typically using a one-time password (OTP) or similar security measures.
Europe has a history of unsuccessful pan-European collaborations aimed at launching new payment schemes and harmonizing the European payments landscape. As shown in Figure 3, the challenges faced by such initiatives are not new. Many have failed due to a range of factors, including a lack of political alignment and insufficient commitment among stakeholders (e.g., EPI's initial phase, the Monnet Project), the absence of a compelling value proposition that meets unmet market needs (e.g., the Euro Alliance of Payment Schemes), and/or misaligned priorities within different local market structures (as seen with PayFair).
Launched in July 2020, the European Payments Initiative (EPI) represented a collaborative effort led by 14 major banks and two payment service providers (PSPs), with the initial goal of creating a pan-European payments network to rival Visa and Mastercard. However, this ambition faltered in March 2022, when 20 supporting banks, including all Spanish members, withdrew from the project. Consequently, the remaining founding members were forced to abandon their plans for a competing payments network. In light of these developments, EPI shifted its focus to developing a digital wallet and instant payment system.
EPI's founding members include some of the EU's largest and most influential banks, representing over 75% of retail banking customers in Belgium, France, and Germany[2]. Each bank member holds 6.49% of EPI's share capital, while PSPs Nexi and Worldline each hold 4.55%. EPI increased its capital from €99 million in 2022 to €329 million in 2023 in order to acquire two major local payment solutions: the highly successful Dutch remote commerce A2A method, iDEAL, and the Belgian A2A solution, Payconiq. EPI’s balance sheet reflects the acquisitions, with €92 million recorded as goodwill.
As of December 31, 2023, EPI had invested €14 million in development costs for the Wero digital wallet, classified as intangible fixed assets[3]. This amount could increase substantially in 2024 and beyond as EPI rolls out its services across European countries, incorporates POS and e-commerce capabilities, and integrates current (and future?) acquired assets.
EPI has taken significant steps to advance Wero's development. As noted above, EPI acquired iDEAL and Payconiq , and also obtained a payment institution license from the National Bank of Belgium — paving the way for Wero's launch in Germany, France, and Belgium. As of February 2025, Belgian scheme Bancontact announced Wero's rollout to Belgian merchants, and plans to phase out the Payconiq brand by 2026. Looking ahead, EPI intends to introduce Wero to the Netherlands and expand its features by mid-2025, and add new partners such as PPRO to help facilitate Wero’s e/m commerce and in-store payments flows.
Outside of Visa and MasterCard, Europe's payment landscape is fragmented, with various payment methods, local card schemes, A2A bank coalition schemes, digital wallets, and BNPL options available (see Figure 6). While non-European wallet providers such as PayPal, Apple, and Google have successfully expanded across Europe, EPI's Wero aims to establish a unified and local alternative. However, to achieve sustainable market penetration, EPI must navigate the challenges posed by Europe’s fragmented ecosystem of local schemes and wallets, while meeting the underlying needs of stakeholders. Principally among these is to overcome the “chicken or egg” dilemma inherent in all new payment methods, ideally by solving an unmet customer need (or significantly improving on a customer need that has already been met) while offering a compelling business case to merchants, PSPs, issuers and other stakeholders.
Wero is an intriguing initiative due to its ambitions, bank backers, significant investment capital, and M&A-led approach of acquiring local A2A schemes. Skeptics can rightly point to the long history of European payment scheme failures (see Figure 3), EPI’s slow development timeline, basic initial products, lack of serving unmet customer needs, lack of compelling reasons for consumers to change behavior, lack of clarity around roadmap, and lack of a compelling business case for stakeholders.
Proponents can rightly point to the success of A2A in Europe (compared to other regions), the need to harmonize a fragmented European payments landscape (and subsequent benefits of interoperability and scale), and the benefits of Europe controlling its own payments destiny in a changing geopolitical landscape. The eventual truth is likely somewhere in the middle, and while it is still too early to draw meaningful conclusions, large, well-funded projects like EPI/Wero are relevant to the industry.
EPI/Wero’s ultimate success and impact will ultimately depend on how it addresses several currently unclear questions:
In addition to these strategic questions, there is a long list of more detailed, tactical questions to be answered, for example:
As with all big initiatives with political overtones, Wero will be one to watch. While we have tried to outline a balanced perspective in the overview and analysis above, we welcome your comments and your thoughts on what we missed!
Please do not hesitate to respond to our posts in social media channels or reach out directly to Erik Howell at Erik@FlagshipAP.com or Alessandro Mighetto at Alessandro@FlaghsipAP.com with your comments or questions.
[1] Wero shows first results: Promise of fast, secure and simple digital payments becomes reality. (https://epicompany.eu/media-insights/wero-shows-first-results-2)
[2] EPI (https://epicompany.eu/)
[3] EPI’s 2023 Financial Statements from National Bank of Belgium (https://www.nbb.be/en)