Companies will then be required to submit their payment orders in XML format based on the ISO 20022 standard. Specifically, the existing EBICS order type AZV will be replaced by the new order type AXZ, and the new data format for cross-border credit transfers will be pain.001.001.09 – an XML message in accordance with ISO 20022.
In this article, we explain what is changing, which systems are affected, what this means specifically for SAP systems, and what companies should do now to be prepared in time.

DTAZV (Datenträgeraustauschverfahren für den Auslandszahlungsverkehr) has so far been the standardized file transfer format used to process cross-border and foreign currency payments between corporate clients and banks. This legacy format – a plain text file with a limited field structure – is now being replaced by ISO 20022-based XML payment messages. The migration essentially affects two areas: the file format and the data content.
New format (AXZ instead of DTAZV): In the future, cross-border credit transfers must be submitted using the XML format pain.001.001.09 with the EBICS order type AXZ. The old DTAZV format will be no longer be supported. For SEPA direct debits (including cross-border SEPA SDD), a migration to pain.008.001.08 is required. The German Banking Industry Committee (Deutsche Kreditwirtschaft) has mandated these new formats; banks already support them in parallel and will no longer accept the legacy DTAZV format from November 2026 onwards. During the transition period until November 2026, companies may still use the existing formats but should migrate to the new XML standards as early as possible.
One of the most significant changes concerns the way address information is provided. Previously, the name and address of the payer or beneficiary could be transmitted in free-text fields. Going forward, at least the city and country must be provided in separate structured fields. In November 2025, a ‘hybrid’ address structure was introduced: while two lines of free text will still be permitted, the elements Town Name (city) and Country must be provided as structured data. This hybrid address structure is explicitly defined as a permanent ‘strategic option’ and should not be considered a transitional model.
From November 2026 onwards, unstructured address information will no longer be permitted – payment files in which the city or country is missing will be rejected by banks. Companies must therefore ensure that their master data is updated accordingly so that all relevant address fields are properly maintained by that time.
The new XML format also introduces several content-related changes:
For SAP Business One users, SAP plans - according to OSS Note 3716789 - to provide a software update by August 31, 2026, which will technically remove the existing DTAZV format and replace it with a new format. Until that point, the DTAZV format will remain fully usable.
For SAP ERP, S/4HANA On-Premise, and Private Cloud, OSS updates may need to be implemented depending on the release. In S/4HANA Public Cloud, the formats are already available. If these have already been applied or are not required, the DMEE tree CGI_XML_CT_V9 or the payment format DE_CGI_XML_CT_V9 for pain.001.001.09 can generally already be used.
Further details can be found in the following OSS Notes:
In SAP, payment media are typically generated using the Payment Medium Workbench and the customizing settings for the payment program.
For all systems using EBICS-based bank communication, the EBICS order type for cross-border payments must be updated in addition to the format migration.
Vendor and customer master data should be reviewed to ensure that city and country are fully maintained in the address fields. In many legacy data records, country codes are missing for domestic recipients, or city and postal code are combined in a single field. Such data quality issues must be resolved. From November 2026 onwards, a single missing city entry may result in the rejection of the entire payment file.
Contact your house banks at an early stage. Ask them to confirm from when AXZ files will be accepted and how testing can be carried out. Many banks already offer the option to submit test payments in the pain.001.001.09 format. Take advantage of these options: run internal test cycles and send test files to the bank or validate them using the tools provided. This ensures that your system is correctly configured and that the bank can process the files.
The discontinuation of the DTAZV format as of November 1, 2026, is mandatory for the German Banking Industry Committee. An extension of the deadline is not planned. Companies that start the migration too late risk payment delays and, in the worst case, immediate impacts on liquidity. In practice, master data cleansing and coordination with house banks are typically the most time-consuming steps - and precisely the ones most often underestimated.
