The limits that once defined banking are disappearing.
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Banking is entering a period where long-standing constraints are fading away. For decades, limitations in technology, organizational design, risk appetite and even imagination served as quiet justifications for maintaining the status quo. Today, the ability to expand capacity without adding headcount, accelerate development without increasing cost and run core processes with AI is pushing the industry from “someday” to “now.”
The timing is right for bold decisions.
Here are Accenture’s top banking trends for 2026. These are the culmination of everything we’ve been hearing over the past year from hundreds of global client engagements and board-level conversations. The trends reflect the challenges and opportunities banks face as they move towards a future where legacy technology and traditional thinking no longer restrict scale, efficiency and innovation.
1. The Future of Experience – Banking everywhere it matters
As AI interfaces evolve from simple automation to conversational, context-aware assistants, customer expectations are changing as profoundly as they did in the first “digital wave.” Banking is moving beyond apps and websites, with AI assistants becoming the new front door.
Customers expect banks to meet them wherever they are, including inside AI platforms like ChatGPT, delivering real-time guidance through experiences that feel as seamless and personal as working with a seasoned banker. When a bank fails to recognize a customer or remember their details, it creates the same jarring disconnect as being reintroduced to someone you’ve already met.
As AI enables third parties to insert themselves between banks and customers, the risk of disintermediation grows, echoing what banks experienced with digital wallets. Yet even as AI blurs the line between digital and human, physical locations will remain anchors of trust, particularly for complex moments that demand reassurance. The customer experience of the future will blend AI-driven convenience with human connection. The winners will orchestrate and remember customer intent seamlessly across every touchpoint, whether owned channels or third-party platforms.
2. The Future of Work & Talent – Agentic AI shatters traditional capacity barriers
Agentic AI is forcing a fundamental rethink of work by removing traditional capacity constraints. The vision of the “10x bank”, where one individual orchestrates intelligent AI co-workers to deliver exponentially greater impact, is coming into view. Early deployments show tangible results, from higher software engineering throughput to faster KYC processing and more dynamic risk decisions.
The scale of change rivals the launch of spreadsheets or even the internet. However, technology alone won’t deliver this value – leaders must empower individuals to rethink the work itself. The lesson from history is clear: When banks pair breakthrough technologies with strong, purpose-driven leadership, they expand opportunity rather than shrink it. Those that redesign roles, build AI fluency at scale, and create intuitive human-AI workflows will convert disruption into durable advantage.
Leadership culture may be the ultimate differentiator. When the internet emerged, employees were excited about how it could change their roles. With gen AI, many are fearful. Leaders must position the technology as an opportunity, not a risk, and cultivate curiosity among employees. They’d be wise to remember that banks win revenue once, but everyone gets cost. The banks focused only on productivity gains will lose to those using AI to boost revenue, and paradoxically, they’ll need more people, not fewer, to capture that growth.
3. The Future of Technology – The high cost of low cost
For decades, banks invested heavily in customer-facing digital experiences while often deferring the harder work of modernizing their technology core. Quick fixes became long-term dependencies. The result is a mountain of technical debt and a cost base rising far faster than revenue, with most spending now devoted simply to keeping legacy systems alive. What once seemed the low-cost path has become a high-cost burden, limiting flexibility and exposing banks to operational risk.
What’s different today is that modernization is finally becoming achievable at the speed and cost profile the industry needs. Gen AI is accelerating everything from core-code understanding to specification-to-code generation. Banks are embracing open source, modular architectures, and shared platforms to lower costs and focus investment on differentiation. In an era where resilience, adaptability, and trust define advantage, modernization is no longer optional.
4. The Future of Risk and Regulation – Seeing the big picture beyond the pixels
Too often, risk management in banking resembles a pixelated image. Banks have an HD view of the trees but can miss a forest fire if they don’t have the full picture. Financial, operational, cyber, and geopolitical risks are colliding in ways that even well-prepared institutions struggle to see clearly. Despite spending tens of billions yearly on risk and compliance, many banks manage exposures in one category at a time and miss how they interact.
The next frontier is orchestration. Banks will need integrated risk architectures that connect data across the enterprise, AI models that surface patterns in real time and cultures where every employee sees risk as part of their role. Institutions that combine technology, insight and human judgment to see the full picture will turn uncertainty into action.
5. The Future of Competition – The battle for the balance sheet intensifies
For centuries, deposits and loans formed the foundation of banking and the primary source of industry revenue. In recent decades, neobanks and fintechs created lucrative niches by claiming revenue streams from banks’ periphery through payments and other functions. Now they are aiming directly at banks’ balance sheets. Stablecoins are competing for deposits, crypto and payments firms are obtaining bank charters, private credit is challenging the loan market, and AI-powered interfaces allow customers to optimize their financial lives instantly.
These shifts threaten more than $200 trillion in deposits and loans once considered secure. The question: How do banks defend the balance sheet while using these same forces to attack new markets? Leaders must break free from product silos and create integrated value propositions that AI agents can’t simply bypass for the highest bidder. The fundamentals of banking will endure, but the mechanisms will look entirely different.
6. The Future of Money – Dumb money gets smarter
Money is entering a new phase, defined not by what it is, but by how it moves and works on behalf of its owner. Digital currencies like stablecoins, CBDCs, and tokenized deposits are moving from experimentation to scaled deployment. Programmable payments are making transactions smarter, allowing money to carry its own data, context, and compliance signals. As much as $13 trillion in transaction value could migrate to alternative payment methods by the decade’s end, according to Accenture research. If the industry doesn’t act, it risks losing billions in fees.
The real transformation begins when intelligence fuses with digital value. Programmable money introduces a world where funds move autonomously based on rules and customer intent: optimizing yields, scheduling settlements, and executing tasks without human intervention. Banks can no longer rely on slow-moving deposits or predictable payment flows. Leaders will define a digital currency strategy, align with emerging customer intents and build a secure foundation for agentic payments.
A New Age of Possibility
The trends shaping 2026 point to a clear inflection point. For some institutions, the shift will feel sudden. But those that lead will see this as a rare chance to redefine the industry’s future.
The foundations of banking will remain steady, built on trust, safety, and human connection. Yet everything around those foundations is set to evolve. What comes next is a future that is faster, smarter and, importantly, more human. Given the scale of change ahead, culture – not technology or the balance sheet – may be the defining advantage. Banks that balance curiosity with execution, innovation with resilience, and automation with empathy will be the ones looking back fondly on 2026.


