The FCA approval rate for Small Payment Institution licences has dropped from 85% to 70% in two years, and if you’re planning to apply, you need to know what’s changed.
Here’s something that might surprise you: getting an SPI licence used to be relatively straightforward. Back in 2023, roughly 85 out of every 100 applicants walked away with approval. Fast forward to 2025, and that number has plummeted to 70%. According to AltFi’s recent analysis, monthly SPI registration requests have surged by more than 40% over the past quarter alone.
What’s happening here isn’t just a numbers game. It’s a fundamental shift in how the FCA views micro-fintech entrants, and it directly affects your bottom line if you’re running a nano or micro MSB.
The SPI Gold Rush Is Real
The surge isn’t random. Small Payment Institution licences have become the go-to entry point for startups targeting niche cross-border markets. We’re talking diaspora remittances, e-commerce payouts, and crypto-to-fiat rails. The appeal is obvious when you look at the numbers:
• SPI registration fee: £2,140 • No initial minimum capital requirement (unless you’re processing over €3 million monthly) • Compare that to API licences requiring at least £125,000 in initial capital
For a 10-person fintech startup, that’s the difference between bootstrapping your way in and needing serious investor backing before you even start trading.
Why Approval Rates Are Tanking
The FCA isn’t being deliberately obstructive. They’re responding to a flood of applications from what they diplomatically call “less prepared, micro-scale fintech entrants.” Translation: too many people are treating SPI applications like a quick tick-box exercise.
Processing times have stretched to 6-9 months, up from the previous 4-6 month average. The bottleneck isn’t just volume. The FCA has quietly tightened their approach to “Fit and Proper” reviews of management and anti-money laundering checks. What used to pass muster two years ago now gets kicked back for additional documentation.
Industry workshops held by the FCA in June and August 2025 hinted at forthcoming amendments to SPI onboarding requirements, including more detailed financial sustainability evidence and increased scrutiny of directors’ experience.
What This Means for Your Business
If you’re already operating with an SPI licence, you’re sitting in an increasingly privileged position. The total number of approved SPI licences rose by approximately 30% year-on-year as of August 2025, but the rejection rate tells a different story about barriers to entry.
For MSBs considering the SPI route, the landscape has shifted. You can’t wing it anymore. The FCA’s current checklist demands robust anti-money laundering procedures, governance frameworks, and IT controls that would make some larger institutions sweat.
Here’s what’s particularly interesting: partnership and agency models involving SPI-licensed firms have grown over 25% across UK MSBs in the past 12 months. Small companies are increasingly leveraging SPI partnerships rather than pursuing full authorisation independently. Smart move, given the approval rate trends.
The Strategic Reality Check
Before you get swept up in the SPI wave, remember the fundamental limitation: monthly payment transaction volumes must stay below €3 million. Hit that ceiling, and you’re legally required to upgrade to API status with full FCA authorisation and capital requirements.
For a growing MSB, that €3 million monthly cap can arrive faster than expected. If you’re processing £50,000 monthly now and growing at 15% month-on-month, you’ll hit the SPI ceiling in roughly 18 months. Factor in the 6-9 month processing time for licence upgrades, and you need to start planning your API transition almost immediately after getting SPI approval.
What You Should Do Right Now
If you’re planning an SPI application, treat it like the serious regulatory undertaking it has become. The days of submitting basic documentation and hoping for the best are over. You need:
• Detailed operational resilience plans • Comprehensive financial sustainability projections • Evidence of relevant management experience • Robust AML and governance frameworks
If you’re already operating in the MSB space, monitor the new SPI entrants in your niche. The 40% surge in applications means fresh competition, but it also creates partnership opportunities. Many of these new players will struggle with the operational complexity of running a compliant payment institution. Your experience suddenly becomes valuable.
The pricing pressure is real, particularly in remittance and payout sub-niches targeting diaspora flows. But remember, many SPI startups are discovering that compliance costs and operational complexity don’t scale linearly with transaction volume.
The Bottom Line
The SPI route remains the most accessible entry point into regulated payment services, but it’s no longer the easy option it once was. The FCA’s tightening standards reflect a maturing market where regulatory scrutiny matches the sector’s growing importance.
For established MSBs, this creates opportunity. For new entrants, it demands serious preparation. The businesses that understand this shift will thrive. Those that don’t will join the growing ranks of rejected applications.
The micro-fintech boom is real, but so are the regulatory realities that come with it.