SWIFT message types

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Template:Short description SWIFT message types are the format or schema used to send messages to financial institutions on the SWIFT network. The original message types were developed by SWIFT and a subset was retrospectively made into an ISO standard, ISO 15022. In many instances, SWIFT message types between custodians follow the ISO standard.[1] This was later supplemented by a XML based version under ISO 20022.

Composition of MT number

SWIFT messages consist of five blocks of data including three headers, message content, and a trailer. Message types are crucial to identifying content.

All SWIFT messages include the literal "MT" (message type/text).[2] This is followed by a three-digit number that denotes the message category, group and type. Consider the following two examples.

Example 1

MT304

  • The first digit (3) represents the category. A category denotes messages that relate to particular financial instruments or services such as precious metals (6), treasury (3), or traveller's cheques (8). The category denoted by 3 is treasury markets
  • The second digit (0) represents a group of related parts in a transaction life cycle. The group indicated by 0 is a financial institution transfer.
  • The third digit (4) is the type that denotes the specific message. There are several hundred message types across the categories. The type represented by 4 is a notification.

A MT304 message is considered an "Advice/Instruction of a Third Party Deal" and it used to advise of or instruct the settlement of a third party foreign exchange deal.[3] For example, an asset manager who executed a FX transaction with a broker would send a MT304 instruction to the custodian bank of the client.

Example 2

MT103

  • The first digit (1) represents the category. The category denoted by 1 is customer payments and cheques.
  • The second digit (0) represents a group of related parts in a transaction life cycle. The group indicated by 0 is a financial institution transfer.
  • The third digit (3) is the type that denotes the specific message. There are several hundred message types across the categories. The type represented by 3 is a notification.

A MT103 message is considered a "Single Customer Credit Transfer" and is used to instruct a funds transfer.[3]

Overview of SWIFT MT categories

The table below shows the different categories and the message type descriptions.

Category Message type Description Number of message types
0 MT0Template:Var System messages -
1 MT1Template:Var Customer payments and cheques 19
2 MT2Template:Var Financial institution transfers 18
3 MT3Template:Var Treasury markets 27
4 MT4Template:Var Collection and cash letters 17
5 MT5Template:Var Securities Markets 60
6 MT6Template:Var Treasury markets – metals and syndications 22
7 MT7Template:Var Documentary credits and guarantees 29
8 MT8Template:Var Traveller's cheques 11
9 MT9Template:Var Cash management and customer status 21

ISO 15022 MT

Although ISO 15022 message types are different in their structure from the SWIFT MT, the naming convention remains the same.

Legal status

The Courts in England and Wales have held that the header of a SWIFT message amounts to a valid form of electronic signature.[4]

See also

External links

  • Message standards supported by the SWIFT network: Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  • Message types defined in ISO15022 Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

References

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  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. swift.com Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  3. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Gill, C., Law Commission report on electronic signatures, Walker Morris, published on 26 September 2019, accessed on 18 June 2025

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