Firms have worked tirelessly and spend hundreds of millions of pounds on compliance with the FCA’s Consumer Duty rules over the last two years. But more work is ahead as the FCA moves into its next phase of enforcement.
The fundamental shift that accompanied the introduction of Consumer Duty was from prescription to principles: specifically, from prescribed inputs, to the principle of good customer outcomes.
Now the FCA has added a third keyword: proof.
The FCA’s policy and strategy director, Charlotte Clark, spoke at a conference recently (as reported in FT Adviser). She said the next step would be a deliberate move from “prescription to principles with proof” – meaning that firms now have to provide evidence that customers are getting good outcomes from the changes made.
One example she gave was that firms should be able to show that their communications are successful at moving customers into better value products. The FCA’s attitude seems to be that new customers are getting better deals as a result of clearer information, but long-standing customers (especially vulnerable ones) are not switching to more suitable products.
Along with this new priority, the FCA will be working on simplifying its own regulations and removing prescriptive templates.
The key requirement, though, will be for firms to provide definitive evidence that customer outcomes are improving.
At the same conference James Daley, managing director of Fairer Finance, said “we’re not even halfway there to get to the standard that the consumer duty implies” – so there’s plenty of work still to do.
So what should you focus on next?
As usual, the FCA hasn’t specified how this evidence should be collected. But based on prior work on customer outcomes, we believe that they would consider the following methods as high quality evidence:
As you’re planning your next Consumer Duty board report and your compliance activities for 2026-27, think about whether you are providing enough evidence of good outcomes to the FCA. If you’re not sure, talk to us about what it would take to implement any of the approaches above. You can email me on leigh@irrationalagency.com.