Compliance and Regulation Heat Up in 2026: A New Phase of Scrutiny for Financial Services Organisations

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 The regulatory landscape facing financial services in 2026 is more complex, more demanding, and faster moving than at any point in the past decade. Across the UK, regulators are attempting to strike a delicate balance of stimulating economic growth while maintaining strong consumer protection and financial stability. This balancing act is unfolding against a backdrop of sluggish economic performance, geopolitical uncertainty, and political pressure for “pro-growth” regulation. The result is a regulatory environment where the pace, scope, and intensity of change is accelerating sharply. Financial institutions are being asked to adapt at speed as supervisory expectations shift, often with limited warning. At the same time, the regulatory perimeter itself is expanding. Post Brexit divergence is reshaping the rulebook, from the FCA’s simplification initiatives to new digital asset frameworks and the removal of legacy EU requirements. Activities involving technology, digital assets, and consumer‑facing financial services are increasingly being brought under direct oversight. Interconnected themes such as AI governance, cyber resilience, data protection, and third‑party risk are now central pillars of regulatory scrutiny. Together, these forces are pushing firms to strengthen operational resilience, modernise compliance capabilities, and build governance structures capable of withstanding a rapidly evolving risk landscape. Founding Regulatory Drivers Several foundational regulatory frameworks continue to shape the UK’s compliance environment, each contributing to a dense and overlapping set of obligations. The principal regulations include: FCA Operational Resilience Policy (2021) The FCA requires firms to identify their critical business services, set impact tolerances, and test their resilience under realistic scenarios. Governance expectations are high, particularly around third-party dependencies and the ability to demonstrate that disruptions can be contained within acceptable thresholds. Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) Originally an EU initiative, but now adopted into the UK’s regulatory architecture, DORA establishes a comprehensive ICT risk management framework. It mandates detailed incident reporting, oversight of ICT third-party providers, including cloud vendors, and rigorous scenario testing to ensure firms can respond to and recover from operational disruptions. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) GDPR continues to impose stringent requirements on personal data protection, including secure processing, data minimisation, and mandatory breach notification within 72 hours. Privacy-by-design principles and continuous assessment of data handling practices remain essential components of compliance. ISO 27001 and Related Standards These international standards provide a structured approach to information security management, guiding firms through risk assessment, mitigation, monitoring, and continuous improvement. Many financial institutions rely on ISO certification as a benchmark of security maturity. The Ever-Expanding Regulatory Perimeter As these frameworks mature, regulators are raising expectations. Static compliance is no longer sufficient. Financial institutions must demonstrate how operational resilience, cyber governance, data protection, and third-party oversight operate as an integrated, enterprise‑wide system. Resilience is no longer simply a regulatory obligation; it is a strategic capability. It influences how firms design their technology stacks, manage suppliers, and protect customers. The consequences of noncompliance are severe. Fines can reach tens of millions of pounds, and reputational damage can take years to repair. The FCA has already demonstrated a willingness to enforce operational resilience requirements aggressively. New Pressures Emerging in 2026 While foundational regulations remain critical, 2026 introduces a new wave of obligations that further elevate expectations for governance, resilience, and accountability. AI-Specific Regulation and Model Governance Regulators are moving rapidly from principle-based guidance to explicit expectations for AI governance. As financial institutions adopt more agentic and autonomous systems, supervisory scrutiny is intensifying. Key themes include ensuring model explainability and auditability, strengthening controls for AI‑driven decision in credit, fraud, and risk, continuously monitoring for model drift and bias, and applying more rigorous oversight to third‑party AI providers. These developments align with the UK’s cross sector AI regulatory framework and the FCA’s growing focus on AI systems. Firms must be prepared to evidence not only the performance of their models but also the fairness, transparency, and accountability of their AI governance process. Critical Third Party (CTP) Regime Under FSMA 2023 2026 marks the first year of full preparation for the UK’s new Critical Third-Party regime, which grants regulators direct oversight of cloud providers, SaaS platforms, and other systemic service providers. Implications for firms include mandatory resilience testing for CTPs, more stringent due diligence, including exit-strategy requirements, and heightened scrutiny of concentration risk. This represents one of the most significant shifts in operational resilience since the FCA’s original policy, fundamentally changing how firms manage and monitor their technology supply chains.Strengthened Cyber Governance Under the UK Cyber Security Strategy, expectations around cyber governance are tightening. Regulators increasingly view cyber risk as business risk. Now they require board-level accountability, mandatory reporting of material cyber incidents, and alignment with NCSC guidance on supply chain security. Boards must now demonstrate active oversight of cyber strategy, risk appetite, and incident response.Consumer Duty Phase Two Enforcement The FCA’s Consumer Duty enters a more assertive enforcement phase in 2026. Operational resilience is now directly linked to customer outcomes. This means firms must show that outages do not cause foreseeable harm. They must ensure communication during incidents is timely and clear and that the digital journeys remain accessible during disruptions. Payments Regulation Reform New APP fraud reimbursement rules and broader payments system reforms require firms to demonstrate real‑time fraud detection capabilities, stronger controls over payment system resilience, and improved incident response coordination with other PSPs. A New Frontier of Integrated Resilience In 2026, the regulatory perimeter has widened dramatically, bringing AI governance, critical third-party oversight, cyber accountability, and strengthened consumer protection firmly into scope. Regulators have made it clear that operational resilience is no longer a technical function, but a cross-enterprise capability built on strong governance, supply assurance, and continuous monitoring. Firms that invest in integrated, forward‑looking compliance frameworks will be best placed to navigate this escalating scrutiny, while those that lag risk both penalties and a loss of customer trust. With expectations set to rise further, resilience has become a strategic imperative, and the institutions that embrace proactive transformation now will define the standards of tomorrow and emerge as trusted leaders in an increasingly demanding financial ecosystem. No#Compliance #RegulationSean TilleySenior Director of Sales EMEA 11:11 Systems26 May, 2026