Job title: Payment Systems Supervision Specialist
Department: PSR - Payment Systems Market Interventions
Salary: National (Edinburgh and Leeds) ranging from £53,800 to £62,733 and London from £59,200 to £69,000 (salary offered will be based on skills and experience)
This role is graded as: Senior Associate - Regulatory - PSR
Your external recruitment contact is Raimonda via [email protected]
Your internal recruitment contact is Katie via [email protected]
Applications must be submitted through our online portal. Applications sent via social media or email will not be accepted.
About the PSR and team
Every time anyone uses a cash machine, transfers money, uses contactless, or gets paid, they use a payment system. Payment systems are always evolving and the PSR is here to make sure they work well for everyone. Follow this link to find out more About The PSR.
The PSR is an independent economic regulator led by interim Managing Director, David Geale – who is also FCA Executive Director, Payments and Digital Finance. Operationally the PSR is currently an independent subsidiary of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), however in March 2025 the Prime Minister announced that the PSR would be consolidated into the FCA, a pragmatic next step in simplifying regulation of payments. This transition will likely take some time and will follow a Government consultation, although the Government has already been clear that payment systems must continue to be effectively regulated. For the time being, therefore, the PSR continues to focus on delivering its important and impactful programme of work, collaborating closely with the FCA.
The Payment Systems Market Intervention Department (PSMI) you are applying to join will ultimately move into the FCA when the new legislation takes effect. Candidates should be aware, therefore, that there may be changes to their responsibilities as consolidation into the FCA progresses.
The Payment Systems Market Interventions (PSMI) Division helps maintain confidence in the UK's payment systems through proactive supervision, monitoring and regulatory oversight. The team works to improve outcomes for payment system users by promoting compliance, challenging poor practices and addressing emerging risks across the sector.
The Supervision team oversees key payment systems, including Faster Payments, LINK, Visa, Mastercard and, following legal cutover, systems such as Open Banking. Supervision plays a vital role in managing regulatory relationships, assessing market developments and ensuring regulatory interventions deliver positive outcomes.
Role responsibilities
Contributing to FCA consolidation planning and approach to supervision post legal cutover. This could include specific dedicated time to supporting the development of new ways of working and consolidating actions across the PSMI division
Managing supervisory relationships with participants in payments systems across a range of the PSR’s rules and regulations
Contributing to the development and continuous improvement of the PSR’s supervisory approach, including by identifying emerging risks, lessons learned and opportunities to enhance effectiveness
Building a clear understanding of firms in their markets, including their operating environments, business strategies and governance arrangements
Building effective working relationships with key internal stakeholders and teams whose work is material to supervision
Promoting a culture of collaboration, inclusion and learning within the PSMI division, acting as a role model for PSR values and behaviours
Skills required
Minimum:
Demonstrated experience in compliance and/or stakeholder relationship management roles within a supervisory, monitoring or regulatory environment
Experience operating in a role requiring significant internal and external engagement or influence
Ability to analyse complex information, identify key issues and produce clear, well-reasoned written outputs including recommendations
Essential:
Demonstrable understanding of supervision and its role in delivering effective, proportionate regulation, supported by casework experience gained within a compliance, supervisory or regulatory environment
Experience developing and maintaining effective stakeholder relationships, with the ability to influence, negotiate and collaborate across organisations
Effective verbal and written communication skills, with the ability to explain and present complex issues clearly and persuasively
Sound judgement, decision-making ability and professionalism, with a proactive and organised approach to managing competing priorities and delivering outcomes
Solid project management and planning skills, with the ability to prioritise workloads, meet deadlines and maintain high standards of delivery
Knowledge of the regulatory landscape and public policy relating to economic regulation or competition, within payments, financial services or another regulated industry.
Benefits
25 days annual leave plus bank holidays
Non-contributory pension (8–12% depending on age) and life assurance at eight times your salary
Private healthcare with Bupa, income protection and 24/7 Employee Assistance
35 hours of paid volunteering annually
Hybrid model where employees work a minimum of 40% in the office each month (expectation of 50% for senior leaders). Changing from September to a minimum of 50% in the office each month (expectation of 60% for Directors and Executive Directors)
A flexible benefits scheme designed around your lifestyle
For a full list of our benefits and our recruitment process as a whole visit our benefits page.
Our values and culture
Our colleagues are the key to our success as a regulator. We are committed to fostering a diverse and inclusive culture: one that’s free from discrimination and bias, celebrates difference and supports colleagues to deliver at their best. We believe that our differences and similarities enable us to be a better organisation – one that makes better decisions, drives innovation and delivers better regulation.
If you require any adjustments due to a disability or condition, your recruiter is here to help - reach out for tailored support.
We welcome diverse working styles and aim to find flexible solutions that suit both the role and individual needs, including options like part-time and job sharing where applicable.
Disability confident: our hiring approach
We’re proud to be a Disability Confident Employer and therefore, people or individuals with disabilities and long-term conditions who best meet the minimum criteria for a role will go through to the next stage of the recruitment process. In cases of high application volumes we may progress applicants whose experience most closely matches the role’s key requirements.
Useful information and timelines
Timeline:
Job advert closes: Midnight, 22nd June 2026
CV Review/Shortlist: 24th June 2026
Interview: w/c 29th June 2026
Your Recruiter will discuss the process in detail with you during screening for the role, therefore, please make them aware if you are going to be unavailable for any date during this time.
Want to learn more before applying?
Join our upcoming webinar on Tuesday, 16 June 2026 from 13:00 to 14:00, to hear directly from our hiring team about this role, our company culture and what we’re looking for in the ideal candidate.
Webinar Details:
Tuesday, 16 June 2026 from 13:00 to 14:00,
Microsoft Teams meeting
Join: https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/353601493804443?p=in4Hmyf3qgH4WrNHlA
Meeting ID: 353 601 493 804 443
Passcode: Mf7QK7Bm
Dial in by phone
+44 20 3321 5238,,757514082# United Kingdom, City of London
Phone conference ID: 757 514 082#
How payments work affects the society we live in; the challenges faced by the vulnerable; how likely we are to fall victim to fraud; and how easily we can manage our money. Payments underpin our economy.
Behind these payments are several important payment systems. We rely on these systems to support markets, facilitate competition and drive innovation. This helps to deliver new products, find new ways to protect people from harm, and deliver services that give people and businesses more choice and control about how to pay and be paid.
We need the technology, the rules governing the use of these systems and the markets they support to all work well. This is where the PSR plays an important role – we are the economic regulator of, and competition authority for, those systems. We protect people and businesses and promote competition and innovation in these systems and the markets that they support.
The PSR is an independent economic regulator led by Managing Director, Chris Hemsley. We are directly accountable to Parliament and funded by the payments industry. We work closely with other regulators involved in this sector, notably the Financial Conduct Authority, the Bank of England and the Competition and Markets Authority.
Operationally we are an independent subsidiary of the Financial Conduct Authority.
Workplace Initiatives
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Program for parents returning to work after Parental Leave? |
No |
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Leadership development programs? |
Yes |
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Mentoring programs? |
Yes |
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Coaching programs? |
Yes |
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Employee-led diversity networks? |
Yes |
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Internal women’s networking groups? |
Yes |
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Open to discussing flexible work arrangements at interview stage? |
Yes |
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No. of weeks paid maternity leave at full salary: |
20 weeks |
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Minimum weeks tenure required to be eligible for paid maternity leave: |
26 weeks |
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No. of weeks paid paternity leave at full salary: |
3 weeks |
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Minimum tenure required to be eligible for paid paternity leave: |
No minimum length of service |
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Gender pay gap reporting information (insert year) (UK): 2020 |
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Average pay gap: |
8.3% |
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Median pay gap: |
12.9% |
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Average bonus gap: |
2.6% |
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Median bonus gap: |
12.5% |
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Signatory of the UK Women in Finance Charter? |
Yes |
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Targets to raise the number of women in leadership? |
Yes |
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Targets to raise the number of BAME individuals in leadership? |
Yes |
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Listed in the Bloomberg Diversity & Inclusion Index? |
No |
Gender diversity across the senior leadership of the PSR is already above 50% and female representation on our executive committee is at 75%. Our target is to maintain a balance of 50% women in the leadership team, with a variance factor of plus or minus 10% and to continue to develop a balanced pipeline of talent through to the end of 2025 and beyond. (This is a broad range as, due to the size of our organisation, just one or two joiners or leavers can have a significant impact on gender balance.)