Changeflow GovPing Banking & Finance FCA Modernises Financial Redress System
Priority review Guidance Amended Final

FCA Modernises Financial Redress System

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Published March 16th, 2026
Detected March 17th, 2026
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Summary

The FCA has announced updates to the financial redress system, in collaboration with the Financial Ombudsman Service and the Government. These changes aim to provide consumers with fairer outcomes more quickly and offer firms greater clarity on complaint handling processes.

What changed

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has published details on modernising the UK's financial redress system, effective March 16, 2026. Key changes include a new registration stage for complaints, updated dismissal grounds, and clearer guidance on the "fair and reasonable" test. The FCA has also revised its assessment of potential harm to include the number and makeup of affected firms, not just the number of consumers, to facilitate earlier identification of systemic issues. These updates are intended to improve alignment, predictability, and early engagement within the system, ensuring consumers receive fair compensation promptly and firms have greater certainty.

Regulated financial services firms should review the updated guidance and operational procedures related to complaint handling and redress. While specific compliance deadlines are not detailed, the effective date of March 16, 2026, suggests firms should prepare for these changes. The FCA's aim is to create a more efficient and trusted redress framework, reducing delays and uncertainty for consumers while providing firms with clearer expectations. Failure to adapt to the modernized system could lead to increased scrutiny and potential issues in complaint resolution.

What to do next

  1. Review updated guidance on complaint registration, dismissal grounds, and the fair and reasonable test.
  2. Update internal complaint handling procedures to align with new assessment criteria for potential harm.
  3. Ensure early engagement protocols with the FCA and Financial Ombudsman Service are in place.

Source document (simplified)

16 March 2026

2 minutes reading time

Creating a redress system that works better for consumers and firms

Charlotte Clark

Director of cross-cutting policy and strategy

A redress system works best when it is clear, simple to use and trusted – both by the consumers who rely on it when something goes wrong, and by the firms expected to put things right.

We’ve reached a significant milestone in our joint work with the Financial Ombudsman Service and the Government to modernise the redress system so that consumers get fair outcomes quicker and firms have greater clarity about how issues will be handled.

We’re delivering change at speed by acting now within our current powers, with a focus on improving how the system works in practice. This includes a new registration stage for complaints, updated dismissal grounds and clearer guidance on the fair and reasonable test.

Throughout, our aim has been to improve alignment, predictability and early engagement across the system – while maintaining strong and effective consumer protection.


Better for consumers

For consumers, this means a smoother and more effective journey when problems arise, with complaints handled promptly by their financial services firm, and fair and fast compensation where it’s due.

Strong consumer protection is not just about rights on paper, but about how well the system delivers for people when they need it most. A system that enables earlier identification of harm, better coordination and clearer expectations should help reduce unnecessary delay and uncertainty for consumers, and support more consistent outcomes.

Consumer stakeholders told us that harm can grow quickly when issues affecting many customers are not spotted early enough. In response, we’ve changed how we assess potential harm in the round. This includes also considering the number and makeup of firms across a market or multiple markets that are affected, rather than relying solely on the number of consumers impacted. This will further support earlier identification of issues and more timely regulatory action.

Firms’ responsibilities to handle complaints fairly and promptly remain unchanged, and the Financial Ombudsman will continue to operate independently, making decisions that are fair and reasonable in individual cases. The focus is on improving how the system functions day-to-day, so that it delivers better outcomes more regularly.


Better for firms

For firms, greater alignment between the FCA and the Financial Ombudsman, alongside clearer routes for early engagement when issues arise, should provide more confidence and predictability. Our changes will help firms understand when to escalate issues, what information is needed, and how wider redress concerns are likely to be approached – supporting better decision making and earlier action. Greater clarity about our expectations, coupled with more predictability of how issues will be handled, will help firms invest, grow and compete.

We’ll continue to work at pace across the whole of the regulatory system to support the Government’s broader reforms. But by strengthening cooperation, encouraging earlier resolution and improving transparency now, we’re creating a redress framework that is fairer, more proportionate and effective – one that works better for consumers, provides greater certainty for firms, and builds confidence and trust in UK financial services.

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Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
FCA
Published
March 16th, 2026
Instrument
Guidance
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Financial advisers Insurers Financial Services
Geographic scope
gb

Taxonomy

Primary area
Financial Services
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Protection Regulatory Reform

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