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Thunes Research Reveals Cross-Border Payments Interoperability Gap as Local Innovation Stops at the Border

Inaugural Interoperability Index from Thunes and Juniper Research reveals that while local networks advance, many cross-border payments remain trapped in a global deadlock.

AMSTERDAM, June 2, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Over a billion people still wait days for international funds to arrive, even though 50% of recipients rank speed as their top priority. A new report by Thunes and Juniper Research reveals a striking disparity between consumer expectations and the reality of slow, fragmented cross-border networks.

The report also highlights a critical blind spot in the financial sector: while local payment systems are faster and more advanced than ever, this innovation stops at the border. Cross-border interoperability – the ability to move money smoothly across borders regardless of geography or underlying systems – remains unresolved.

To map these gaps, the inaugural Thunes Cross-Border Payments Interoperability Index published with insights from Juniper Research benchmarked 50 countries. The findings reveal stark regional variations, but also a common thread across the globe: a lack of interoperability impacts all regions, proving that strong domestic progress does not automatically guarantee seamless international connectivity.

The Regional Picture: Innovation Without Connection

The Growth of Mobile Wallet Adoption

The report also confirms a major shift in how people send and receive international payments:

Despite this shift, banks remain deeply embedded in settlement infrastructure, highlighting the need for better integration between financial ecosystems.

Stablecoins: Trust and Regulation as the Final Hurdle

While just 11% of people globally usually use cryptocurrency platforms to send money internationally, specific markets show huge appetite for digital assets:

Mathieu Limousi, Chief Marketing Officer at Thunes, said: "We are witnessing a great contradiction in global finance: domestic payments have gone instant, yet too often the moment money hits a border, innovation grinds to a halt. Our Interoperability Index proves that the battleground for global financial inclusion is not about building more infrastructure, it’s about connecting what already exists. Mobile wallets, digital assets, and traditional banks are all scaling rapidly, but they operate as isolated islands. True financial mobility will only happen when we force these disconnected networks to talk to one another, ensuring that technology doesn’t stop at the border."

Nick Maynard, VP of Research at Juniper Research, added: "The data shows a clear structural deadlock. Cross-border friction is no longer a localised payment rails problem; it is a global interoperability crisis. While domestic infrastructure has reached real-time speeds, the international links connecting them remain heavily fragmented. Even in tech-forward markets, global payments continue to fail at the last mile because different financial ecosystems cannot seamlessly interact."

Download a full copy of the report: The Thunes Cross-border Payments Interoperability Index.

Methodology

The report is based on an online consumer survey conducted by Juniper Research in April 2026, among 6,763 respondents across 10 countries: the United States, Brazil, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, China, India, the Philippines, the UK, Germany, South Africa and Nigeria. The Interoperability Index evaluates 50 markets using proprietary survey data and established benchmarks, including the World Bank Global Findex Database 2025 and World Bank remittance cost data.

About Thunes

For more information, visit: https://www.thunes.com/

About Juniper Research

For more information, visit: www.juniperresearch.com

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