Electronic Bill Payment & Presentment (EBPP)

Electronic Bill Payment & Presentment (EBPP)

Electronic bill payment and presentment (EBPP) is a process that companies use to collect payments electronically through systems like the Internet, direct-dial access, and Automated Teller Machines (ATMs). Specifically, an online bank offers customers the ability to make deposits, withdrawals, transfers between accounts, and other traditional services, as well as online bill payments, such as EBPP. For example, a healthcare insurance company looking to streamline its customer billing system may decide to switch to EBPP and allow customers to pay directly on their website or to have premiums automatically deducted each month. Electronic bill payment and presentment (EBPP) is a process that companies use to collect payments electronically through systems like the Internet, direct-dial access, and Automated Teller Machines (ATMs). In the bank-aggregator model, a banking customer can pay several different bills from their bank accounts.

EBPPs are systems used to collect payments electronically.

What Is Electronic Bill Payment and Presentment?

Electronic bill payment and presentment (EBPP) is a process that companies use to collect payments electronically through systems like the Internet, direct-dial access, and Automated Teller Machines (ATMs). It has become a core component of online banking at many financial institutions today. Other industries — including insurance providers, telecommunications companies, and utilities — depend on EBPP services as well.

EBPPs are systems used to collect payments electronically.
A biller-direct EBPP lets users pay bills directly via the company's website.
In the bank-aggregator model, a banking customer can pay several different bills from their bank accounts.
Some newer services allow customers to pay all of their bills from one website and these are called consumer-consolidation EBPPs.

Understanding EBPP

EBPPs come in two types: biller-direct and bank-aggregator. Biller-direct is electronic billing, which is offered by the company providing the good or service. The company gives customers the option to pay bills directly on their web site and might alert them when a payment is due via email. The customer then logs into the site via a secure connection, reviews the billing information, and enters payment amount.

The bank-aggregator or bill-consolidator model allows customers to pay bills to many different companies through one portal. That is, the service collects different payments from customers and distributes each payment to the appropriate company. A bank, for instance, might offer online users the option to make many different payments like credit cards, utility bills, and insurance premiums. Standalone sites also exist that allow people to view and pay all of their bills. These are called consumer consolidator models.

Some newer EBPP products include features like secure email delivery, stored payment data, and autopay. For example, a healthcare insurance company looking to streamline its customer billing system may decide to switch to EBPP and allow customers to pay directly on their website or to have premiums automatically deducted each month. Doing so saves customers the hassle of filing paperwork and can save the organization on document delivery and processing costs.

Some providers allow the development of EBPP systems by building new payment sites for their customers. These might include features to authorize transactions, capture payments, or allow for refunds. These systems typically accept major credit cards and can sometimes save an enterprise money on transaction processing costs, increasing their revenue and profit overall.

EBPP and Online Banking

Many large banks offer electronic bill payment and presentment services as a part of their online banking system. In general, online banking, which is sometimes called "Internet banking" or "web banking," allows users to execute financial transactions via the Internet. Specifically, an online bank offers customers the ability to make deposits, withdrawals, transfers between accounts, and other traditional services, as well as online bill payments, such as EBPP.

Convenience is obviously a major advantage of online banking because transactions can take place 24 hours-a-day, seven days a week. On the downside, accounts can be vulnerable to hacking (although banking security is continually improving). For that reason, when using online banking, consumers are advised to use their data plans, rather than public Wi-Fi networks, to help prevent unauthorized access.

Related terms:

Automated Teller Machine (ATM)

An automated teller machine is an electronic banking outlet for completing basic transactions without the aid of a branch representative or teller. read more

Bill Presentment

Bill presentment, like a bank check, is an instruction that directs a third party to pay the recipient a fixed sum. read more

Deposit

A deposit is both a transfer of funds to another party for safekeeping and the portion of funds used as collateral for the delivery of a good. read more

Disintermediation

Disintermediation is the removal of a middleman in the supply chain to allow producers to sell directly to their customers. read more

Electronic Commerce (Ecommerce)

Ecommerce is a business model that enables the buying and selling of goods and services over the Internet. Read about ecommerce benefits and trends. read more

Home Banking

Home banking is the practice of conducting banking transactions from home rather than at branch locations and can include online banking. read more

Insurance Premium

An insurance premium is the amount of money an individual or business pays for an insurance policy. read more

Online Banking

Online banking allows a user to conduct financial transactions via the Internet. Online banking is also known as Internet banking or web banking. read more

Payment Gateway

A payment gateway is the front-end technology that reads payment cards and sends customer information to the merchant acquiring bank for processing. read more

Payment

Payment is the transfer of one form of goods, services, or financial assets in exchange for another form of goods, services, or financial assets in acceptable proportions. read more