SwanBitcoin445X250

Graph showing UK consumer usage of digital wallets
GENERATIONAL VARIATION: Digital wallets are much more popular with the 18-34 age group in the UK

Just over a third of UK consumers now have a digital wallet (34%), but that proportion rises to more than two thirds among 18-34 year olds (64%) compared with just 18% among 54-65 year olds, a survey has found.

Of those respondents who make payments using a digital wallet, 46% use Apple Pay, 41% Paypal, 9% Google Pay and 3% Samsung Pay.

The UK Payments in Transition to Digital survey also found that more than a quarter of UK consumers no longer carry physical cash (26%), but that cash and physical card payments remain the most popular payment methods, with more than four in ten saying they appreciate being able to pay with cash or card (43%)  and just under a quarter concerned that some people would struggle if physical cash were no longer available (22%).

In addition, it reveals that, although the total annual number of cash withdrawals from ATMs in the UK dropped below 7,000m in 2020 for the first time since 2000 and has fallen significantly from average annual totals of more than 12,000m between 2010-2016, 60% of respondents use an ATM at least a few times a month and that only 5% never withdraw cash from a machine.

“Despite attempts by so-called ‘alt pay’ providers to present cards as a legacy technology, cards are still the dominant non-cash payment method by some distance,” the researchers say.

“The advent of more powerful chips on payment cards and new biometric security arrangements — together with the popularity of contactless NFC transactions using cards — have breathed new life into the card as a payment method.

“As more powerful chip cards including biometric security come to market, we can expect to see

Read more from our friends at NFC World