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Shorter Reads
It is nearly the 3-year anniversary of the FCA’s Consumer Duty[1] coming into force, which was intended to set “higher and clearer standards of consumer protection across financial services”. This article checks in on the impact of the Consumer Duty, including how financial services firms have (or have not!) embedded it into their practices, and whether they truly are putting their customer’s needs first.
[1] https://collyerbristow.com/longer-reads/the-new-fca-consumer-duty/
4 minute read
Published 18 June 2026
The Consumer Duty is the 12th and most recent of the FCA’s core principles, set out at Section 2.1 of its PRIN Handbook, alongside requirements such as conducting business with integrity, skill, and care, managing risks effectively, and maintaining financial prudence. It has been in effect for some time now (from 31 July 2023 for products or services open to sale and renewal, and 31 July 2024 for closed products or services).
It was a new package of measures relating to retail customers which comprised a new FCA Principle, Cross-Cutting Rules and Four Specific Outcomes. Plenty for those within the financial services sector to get their heads around.
Cross Cutting Rules
These are rules embedded in PRIN 2A which represent the foundational standards of behaviour that must “cut across” and be applied to every aspect of a business providing services to retail clients and apply at all stages of the customer journey and during the “whole lifecycle of a product”.
In the FCA framework, these three rules are:
The cross-cutting obligations define how firms should act to deliver good outcomes for retail customers
Manufacturers – product approval process
One of the key tenets of the Consumer Duty is that it applies to the manufacturer of a product even where that manufacturer sells the product onto another person, i.e. a private bank / IFA which on-sells to the underlying retail customer.
Prior to the introduction of the Consumer Duty, a manufacturer could switch off as soon as it had sold its product onto another “retail facing” institution which would sell the product to its own customers, in the knowledge that the retail facing institution would undertake its own suitability and appropriateness tests. Whilst the Consumer Duty does not require the manufacturer to know every customer, the rules in PRIN 2A now require the manufacturer to keep in mind the nature of the customer
More specifically PRIN 2A contains detailed instructions to manufacturers for their product approval procedures:
Evidencing Compliance and Best Practice
Complying with the Consumer Duty is one thing – but evidencing that compliance to the FCA is another. The FCA has continued to publish guidance, including PRIN 2A[1], PS22/9[2] and FG22/5[3]. These guidance updates are intended to enable firms to learn from each other; helping them to understand best practices and adapt those to their own business structure.
Most recently the FCA has emphasised the importance of consumer understanding. This stems from the Communications Outcome: communications which equip customers to make effective, timely and properly informed decisions about financial products and services. It is crucial that such information is presented in a way the particular customer can understand, which requires flexibility and innovation.
The FCA recently concluded a review on this issue and has published its findings on 13 March 2026[4]. It combined supervisory findings, form data, behavioural research, and extensive engagement with industry bodies, charities and consumer groups to build a comprehensive picture of current practice.
The highlights of best practices were:
The areas for improvement were:
Further FCA Guidance in the light of unstable political environment
Since them the FCA’s Director of Cross Cutting Rules has explained via an article addressed to regulated firms, posted on the FCA’s website on 26th May 2026, that the FCA “expect you to have embedded the Duty and to monitor outcomes actively, identifying where consumers are at risk of harm in a rapidly changing environment”.
Price & Value
Given current global uncertainties and challenges to the cost of living, the FCA is now emphasising that they want firms to regularly review whether their customers are receiving fair value as circumstances change. The FCA has indicated that they want firms to monitor outcomes for higher-risk customer groups and to take action (such as reducing costs, charges etc) if some of their products no longer represent fair value. There is no indication as to what constitutes fair value; however, it would be sensible to benchmark vs. other offerors in the same market
Enforcement
To date, the FCA has generally used formal enforcement as a last resort to warn other market participants. Instead, the FCA has focussed more on intervention and persuasion to cajole firms into compliance.
The FCA’s Director of Competition explained that: ‘And our message very much to consumers is: If you’re unhappy with any aspect of your financial services, of course complain to your provider, and if you’re not happy with the response you get then the Financial Ombudsman Service is there as well to deal with any of those concerns.’
The FCA continues to “encourage firms to innovate the ways in which they communicate with and support their customers” and remains mindful that whilst the expectations apply to firms of all sizes “approaches may be proportionate to a firm’s scale and resources”.
If you are in need of advice regarding how to implement the Consumer Duty within your corporation, please do not hesitate to contact our team here at Collyer Bristow.
[1] FCA Handbook – PRIN 2A The Consumer Duty
[2] https://www.fca.org.uk/publication/policy/ps22-9.pdf
[3] https://www.fca.org.uk/publication/finalised-guidance/fg22-5.pdf
[4] Consumer understanding: good practice and areas for improvement | FCA
Related content
Shorter Reads
It is nearly the 3-year anniversary of the FCA’s Consumer Duty[1] coming into force, which was intended to set “higher and clearer standards of consumer protection across financial services”. This article checks in on the impact of the Consumer Duty, including how financial services firms have (or have not!) embedded it into their practices, and whether they truly are putting their customer’s needs first.
[1] https://collyerbristow.com/longer-reads/the-new-fca-consumer-duty/
Published 18 June 2026
The Consumer Duty is the 12th and most recent of the FCA’s core principles, set out at Section 2.1 of its PRIN Handbook, alongside requirements such as conducting business with integrity, skill, and care, managing risks effectively, and maintaining financial prudence. It has been in effect for some time now (from 31 July 2023 for products or services open to sale and renewal, and 31 July 2024 for closed products or services).
It was a new package of measures relating to retail customers which comprised a new FCA Principle, Cross-Cutting Rules and Four Specific Outcomes. Plenty for those within the financial services sector to get their heads around.
Cross Cutting Rules
These are rules embedded in PRIN 2A which represent the foundational standards of behaviour that must “cut across” and be applied to every aspect of a business providing services to retail clients and apply at all stages of the customer journey and during the “whole lifecycle of a product”.
In the FCA framework, these three rules are:
The cross-cutting obligations define how firms should act to deliver good outcomes for retail customers
Manufacturers – product approval process
One of the key tenets of the Consumer Duty is that it applies to the manufacturer of a product even where that manufacturer sells the product onto another person, i.e. a private bank / IFA which on-sells to the underlying retail customer.
Prior to the introduction of the Consumer Duty, a manufacturer could switch off as soon as it had sold its product onto another “retail facing” institution which would sell the product to its own customers, in the knowledge that the retail facing institution would undertake its own suitability and appropriateness tests. Whilst the Consumer Duty does not require the manufacturer to know every customer, the rules in PRIN 2A now require the manufacturer to keep in mind the nature of the customer
More specifically PRIN 2A contains detailed instructions to manufacturers for their product approval procedures:
Evidencing Compliance and Best Practice
Complying with the Consumer Duty is one thing – but evidencing that compliance to the FCA is another. The FCA has continued to publish guidance, including PRIN 2A[1], PS22/9[2] and FG22/5[3]. These guidance updates are intended to enable firms to learn from each other; helping them to understand best practices and adapt those to their own business structure.
Most recently the FCA has emphasised the importance of consumer understanding. This stems from the Communications Outcome: communications which equip customers to make effective, timely and properly informed decisions about financial products and services. It is crucial that such information is presented in a way the particular customer can understand, which requires flexibility and innovation.
The FCA recently concluded a review on this issue and has published its findings on 13 March 2026[4]. It combined supervisory findings, form data, behavioural research, and extensive engagement with industry bodies, charities and consumer groups to build a comprehensive picture of current practice.
The highlights of best practices were:
The areas for improvement were:
Further FCA Guidance in the light of unstable political environment
Since them the FCA’s Director of Cross Cutting Rules has explained via an article addressed to regulated firms, posted on the FCA’s website on 26th May 2026, that the FCA “expect you to have embedded the Duty and to monitor outcomes actively, identifying where consumers are at risk of harm in a rapidly changing environment”.
Price & Value
Given current global uncertainties and challenges to the cost of living, the FCA is now emphasising that they want firms to regularly review whether their customers are receiving fair value as circumstances change. The FCA has indicated that they want firms to monitor outcomes for higher-risk customer groups and to take action (such as reducing costs, charges etc) if some of their products no longer represent fair value. There is no indication as to what constitutes fair value; however, it would be sensible to benchmark vs. other offerors in the same market
Enforcement
To date, the FCA has generally used formal enforcement as a last resort to warn other market participants. Instead, the FCA has focussed more on intervention and persuasion to cajole firms into compliance.
The FCA’s Director of Competition explained that: ‘And our message very much to consumers is: If you’re unhappy with any aspect of your financial services, of course complain to your provider, and if you’re not happy with the response you get then the Financial Ombudsman Service is there as well to deal with any of those concerns.’
The FCA continues to “encourage firms to innovate the ways in which they communicate with and support their customers” and remains mindful that whilst the expectations apply to firms of all sizes “approaches may be proportionate to a firm’s scale and resources”.
If you are in need of advice regarding how to implement the Consumer Duty within your corporation, please do not hesitate to contact our team here at Collyer Bristow.
[1] FCA Handbook – PRIN 2A The Consumer Duty
[2] https://www.fca.org.uk/publication/policy/ps22-9.pdf
[3] https://www.fca.org.uk/publication/finalised-guidance/fg22-5.pdf
[4] Consumer understanding: good practice and areas for improvement | FCA
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