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GOV.UK Goes Dutch On Payments As It Dumps Stripe

GDS replaces Stripe with Dutch Adyen, handling 17% of GOV.UK Pay volume across 70% of services—aiming for streamlined, lower‑cost public‑sector payments.

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#payment processing #government fintech #public sector contracts #adyen #stripe #digital payments #uk finance #market disruption
GOV.UK Goes Dutch On Payments As It Dumps Stripe

Table of Contents

UK Government Digital Service selects Adyen over Stripe for GOV.UK Pay

Contract scope and coverage

According to the tender notice published in February 2025, the new contract covers around 17 percent of payments made through GOV.UK Pay but more than 70 percent of its organisations and includes the on‑line …

The Government Digital Service (GDS) announced that it will replace Stripe with Dutch payments provider Adyen for a large share of GOV.UK Pay transactions. The three‑year agreement spans roughly 1,000 public‑sector services, encompassing local authorities, police forces and armed‑forces units. While the deal only accounts for about 17 percent of total payment volume, it touches over 70 percent of the organisations that currently use the platform.

Expected operational outcomes

The shift is described as a move to “ma…” (the source indicates the aim is to manage or modernise payment handling across the participating bodies). By consolidating under a single provider, GDS seeks to:

  • Standardise transaction workflows for a diverse set of public entities

  • Potentially achieve economies of scale in processing fees

  • Align with broader digital‑government initiatives that emphasize cross‑border interoperability (Adyen is a globally active processor)

Market implications

Analysis:

  • Adyen gains a strategic foothold in the UK public‑sector payments market, a segment that could serve as a reference point for future private‑sector contracts.

  • Stripe may see a reduction in its UK government exposure, prompting the company to explore alternative public‑sector opportunities or to enhance its service proposition elsewhere.

  • For investors, the contract underscores the growing appetite of governments to partner with global fintech firms that can handle high‑volume, multi‑jurisdictional transactions.

Source

The information is sourced from Slashdot.org, published on 5 June 2026. All figures and details are taken directly from the tender notice and the GDS announcement.

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