Bank Negara Malaysia has officially introduced its newly updated Interoperable Fund Transfer Framework, signaling a massive consolidation in the country digital financial landscape. The regulatory directive introduces strict guidelines that effectively reshape how mobile and digital payments operate across the nation. Under the new rules, the central bank aims to eliminate market fragmentation and foster an environment of seamless collaborative competition among various financial institutions and electronic money issuers. The fundamental objective of the policy change is to streamline electronic transactions for both domestic retail consumers and commercial merchants, building a more unified and highly secure payment ecosystem.
The central bank framework mandates that all proprietary or closed-loop quick response payment networks must cease operations entirely by June 30, 2028. This long-term timeline provides a structured transition window for financial services providers to wind down their existing independent networks and adapt to the unified national system. To ensure that closed networks do not expand during this period, Bank Negara Malaysia has prohibited the onboarding of any new merchants onto proprietary systems throughout the transition phase. This restriction ensures that the industry collective focus immediately shifts toward integration rather than further branching into isolated payment silos.
As the central element of this comprehensive regulatory shift, all retail quick response transactions will be migrated onto the shared national infrastructure managed by Payments Network Malaysia or PayNet. Specifically, transactions will run exclusively on the established DuitNow infrastructure, which functions as the cornerstone of the national interoperable payment standard. For everyday retail environments, this means that merchants will no longer need to display multiple standees or distinct barcodes from different electronic wallet providers and banking apps at their cash counters. Instead, a single unified standard code will have the full technical capacity to accept funds from any participating banking institution or digital wallet.
The structural impact on the merchant and consumer sides promises to drastically reduce transaction friction and operational complexity. Merchants benefit from reduced counter clutter and a simplified reconciliation process because all incoming digital payments route through a single, standardized pipeline rather than multiple separate provider balances. Consumers also benefit from an optimized payment experience, knowing they can use their preferred banking or mobile wallet app to instantly scan and pay any vendor across the country without worrying about application compatibility. Payment network providers will consequently compete on the actual value of their services and user interfaces rather than relying on exclusive, vendor-locked networks.
Digital payment gateway and software providers that have integrated with the national standard since their inception are already fully positioned to support this policy transition. Merchant platforms like HitPay have emphasized that because the core architecture of their local service offerings has aligned with the national system from day one, their affiliated businesses will face zero service interruptions. This structural readiness underscores how regulatory interoperability serves as a foundational benefit for modern digital commerce infrastructure rather than an administrative compliance burden. Moving forward, the framework sets a robust precedent for regional digital transformation by showing how regulatory oversight can successfully unify a deeply competitive fintech sector under a single interoperable roof.
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