Definition
The SCT (SEPA Credit Transfer) is the classic SEPA credit transfer: an account-to-account transfer in euros, across the ~40 SEPA countries, executed within a maximum of one business day.
Free or near-free, with no regulatory ceiling, it is the default mode for salaries, invoices and supplier payments — all the flows where instant speed is not critical.
SCT vs SCT Inst: which to use
- SCT — up to one business day, generally free, no regulatory ceiling, available everywhere in the SEPA zone.
- SCT Inst — under 10 seconds, 24/7, ceiling of €100k, free for individuals in the eurozone since the IPR.
Simple rule: if speed is not critical, SCT; if you need to confirm the arrival of funds immediately, SCT Inst.
How an SCT works
- The payer (PAO) initiates the order with their bank (via app, web, or a PISP).
- The bank checks the funds, authenticates (SCA if a new payee), then forwards it to a clearing system: CORE(FR) domestically, STEP2 cross-border.
- The clearing system forwards it to the payee's (PR) bank, which credits the account.
- Standard timing: D+1 business day at most, often a few hours in practice.
What an SCT allows
- Transferring any amount in EUR (banks set their own anti-fraud limits).
- Including a reference (
Remittance Information) of up to 140 characters. - Being initiated by a PISP within the PSD2 framework.
- Being recurring via a standing order.
What an SCT does not allow
- Instant speed: that is the role of SCT Inst.
- Debiting the payee's account: an SCT is always initiated by the payer; for a payee-side debit, you need an SDD.
- A currency other than EUR.
- An automatic return: once executed, it is irrevocable (recovery is possible but cumbersome).
In the PSD2 ecosystem
The SCT is the foundational payment instrument in Europe: most of a lifetime's transfers are SCTs, even without knowing it — the "SEPA" label in the banking interface is the giveaway.
Concrete examples
- Salary: the employer launches a transfer file on the 28th of the month; employees are credited on the last business day, no urgency.
- Supplier payment: a €12,000 invoice settled from a Qonto or Shine business account, credited the next business day, free of charge.
- Rent: an SCT standing order pays the rent each month — the one-business-day timing is fine.
- B2B: most payments, especially on large amounts where instant speed adds nothing and an anti-fraud control window is useful.
- Implementation: exposing an SCT goes through the PSD2 APIs (
POST /payment-requestsin STET); a stable spec, supported by 100% of banks. - UX limit: the one-business-day timing slows e-commerce and P2P — exactly the reason SCT Inst exists, made mandatory in 2025.