Service Bank Accounts 45% Enforcement - Bank 35%
Specialism Prudential Standards 65% Supervision 55%
2026-03-16 09:05:02 · csoo@vixio.com
ID
2967727
GUID
8e44a98295a07062b3c9ae87d67a076a

Classification

Service
Bank Accounts (45%)

Bank Accounts is a low-priority tag that applies tangentially because DGS protections relate to deposit account safeguards, but the update focuses on administrative contribution methodology rather than account access or consumer protections.

Enforcement - Bank (35%)

Enforcement - Bank is a low-priority secondary match because the DGS is a prudential safeguard mechanism rather than an enforcement action against a specific bank for regulatory breach.

Specialism
Prudential Standards (65%)

The update concerns deposit guarantee scheme contribution methodology changes, which relates to prudential safeguarding of deposits but is not directly a payment services regulation; requires human review due to borderline applicability to payments compliance scope.

Supervision (55%)

The consultation on DGS contribution methodology has a supervisory element as the Central Bank is administering the scheme, but this is primarily administrative rather than ongoing regulatory oversight of payment firms; requires human review.

<p>Central Bank of Ireland (Central Bank) is designated as the national authority in the State that carries out the functions and duties of a&nbsp;<a href="https://service.betterregulation.com/definition/47119" data-sf-ec-immutable="">designated authority</a>&nbsp;for the purposes of&nbsp;<a href="https://service.betterregulation.com/document/158490" data-sf-ec-immutable="">Directive 2014/49/EU</a> (the Deposit Guarantee Scheme (DGS) Directive). This Directive was transposed into Irish legislation in the form of the <a href="https://service.betterregulation.com/document/201768" data-sf-ec-immutable="">S.I. No. 516 of 2015</a>&nbsp;(the DGS Regulations) which provides the legal basis for the DGS in Ireland.<br /></p><p>The Central Bank is proposing to change the method used to calculate annual contributions to the DGS from the current flow‑based approach to a stock‑based approach, to take effect from Q3 2026. This follows a review of the 2016 European Banking Authority (EBA) Guidelines and a public consultation in 2022 by the EBA, which resulted in the issuing of new guidelines <a href="https://www.eba.europa.eu/sites/default/files/document_library/Publications/Guidelines/2023/1052023/Final%20report%20of%20the%20revised%20GL%20on%20DGS%20contributions.pdf" data-sf-ec-immutable="">EBA/GL/2023/02</a> (2024 EBA Guidelines), in 2023, applicable from 3 July 2024.<br /></p><p>The Central Bank&rsquo;s aim is to make contribution requests more proportionate for member institutions, now that this new stock-based approach is available to use by the EBA and that the funds held in Irish DGS has reached its minimum target level of 0.8% of covered deposits in the State. A member institution&rsquo;s contribution calculated using the stock-based approach should more closely reflect changes in its risk profile and the level of covered deposits it holds. It also introduces the possibility that a member institution&rsquo;s past contributions could place it in credit against future contributions.</p><p>The Central Bank welcomes the views of industry on this proposal<strong> by</strong> <strong>5pm on Friday 17 Apil 2026</strong>.&nbsp;<strong></strong></p>

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TITLE: Ireland's Central Bank Launches Consultation on Deposit Guarantee Scheme Contribution Methodology BODY: On 13 March 2026, the Central Bank of Ireland launched a consultation on changing the methodology for calculating annual contributions to the Deposit Guarantee Scheme (DGS) from a flow-based approach to a stock-based approach, effective from Q3 2026. The Central Bank is designated as the national authority responsible for administering the DGS under Directive 2014/49/EU (the DGS Directive), transposed into Irish law through Statutory Instrument No. 516 of 2015 (the DGS Regulations). The proposed change follows the European Banking Authority's (EBA) publication of new guidelines, EBA/GL/2023/02 (2024 EBA Guidelines), which became applicable from 3 July 2024. The shift to a stock-based approach is now feasible given that the Irish DGS has reached its minimum target level of 0.8 percent of covered deposits in the State. Under the stock-based methodology, member institutions' contributions will more closely reflect changes in their individual risk profiles and the level of covered deposits they hold. The new approach aims to make contribution requests more proportionate for member institutions. Additionally, the stock-based method introduces the possibility that a member institution's past contributions could place it in credit against future contributions, providing potential financial relief for certain participants. Member institutions are invited to submit their views on this proposal to the Central Bank by 5pm on Friday, 17 April 2026. The consultation paper (CP167) is available on the Central Bank's website.
  • Scraped:2026-03-16 09:05:02
  • Created:2026-03-16 09:05:02
  • By:csoo@vixio.com (59)