BOSTON– Credit unions seeking to build long-term relationships with members need to tackle a much shorter-term challenge first — meeting digital-first expectations of younger generations, according to a new study.
“What was once a differentiator — personal service and community roots — must now be paired with frictionless payment tools like tap-to-pay cards and mobile wallets to keep younger members engaged from the start,” said PYMNTS Intelligence in releasing its report. “The opportunity for forward-looking credit unions lies in making innovation a core part of their service promise. Smaller institutions, long thought to be slower to adopt, are increasingly investing in modern payment experiences.”

Closing the Gap
PYMNTS said its latest Credit Union Tracker, done in collaboration with Velera and titled Small Steps, Big Gains: Innovation Gap Narrows as Small CUs Catch Up, shows many smaller CUs are closing the gap by focusing on fraud protection, efficiency and member experience.
“But perhaps the most significant driver is meeting younger consumers’ demand for seamless, digital-first interactions,” PYMNTS said. “By prioritizing contactless options, credit unions can retain existing younger members and attract new ones, ensuring relevance in a marketplace where competitors are already moving fast.”
Where Contactless Counts
According to PYMNTS, the data show:
• Contactless Cards: 56% of younger millennials and 48% of Gen Z use contactless cards at least a few times a week.
• Mobile Wallets: 38% of Gen Z and 36% of younger millennials use mobile wallets weekly, and 12% of Gen Z name it as their most-preferred payment method.
• CU Adoption Rates: Among small credit unions, the share offering contactless debit cards rose 61% in one year, and contactless credit cards by 58%.
“These numbers show a clear demand and a clear opening for credit unions that want to be seen as modern, accessible and member-first,” PYMNTS stated.
Closing the Gap With Competitors
PYMNTS said CU mobile apps still lag behind banks in ratings and usability. “This gap in user experience risks undoing gains in contactless card adoption,” it noted. But with fintech partners offering real-time validation and other tools, “small institutions can move quickly without carrying the cost of building everything in-house.”
A Strategy for the Next Generation
The analysis concluded that “investing in contactless is no longer optional. Gen Z and millennials expect it, use it, and increasingly prefer it.”







