Paying Agent: Definition, How It Works, Agreements

Carla Tardi is a technical editor and digital content producer with 25+ years of experience at top-tier investment banks and money-management firms.

Updated August 02, 2022 Fact checked by Fact checked by Timothy Li

Timothy Li is a consultant, accountant, and finance manager with an MBA from USC and over 15 years of corporate finance experience. Timothy has helped provide CEOs and CFOs with deep-dive analytics, providing beautiful stories behind the numbers, graphs, and financial models.

What Is a Paying Agent?

A paying agent—also known as a "disbursing agent"—is one who accepts payments from the issuer of a security and then distributes the funds to holders of the security.

Paying Agent Explained

Paying agents are usually a corporate trust department of a bank or trust company that are designated to make dividend, coupon, and principal payments to a security holder on behalf of the issuer. When paying agents are used for stocks—the agent receives dividends, which they then disburse to stockholders. For bonds, paying agents receive coupon payments, which they then give to bondholders. In a bond issue, the bond’s indenture will usually name a paying agent to be responsible for making interest and principal payments. A paying agent acts as an intermediary in these transactions, and receives a fee for their services.

In bond issues where there is more than one jurisdiction, there will be more than one paying agent, one of which will perform a coordinating role. If it is not a trustee deal, the coordinating agent role will be performed by the fiscal agent. If it is a trustee deal, the agent will be called the "principal paying agent."

Key Takeaways

Paying Agents' Other Services

Specialty firms like investment banks, which act as paying agents, can provide related services that are broader than a straightforward disbursal of funds, including but not limited to:

Paying agencies that are investment banks also can help link their clients with the shareholders of a target company in the event of a cash distribution of proceeds for an acquisition or leveraged buyout (LBO).

Adjunct Agent Roles

In the debt capital markets, a wide range of administrative roles, in addition to the paying agent's, help to complete the transactions involved with bringing new issues to market.

A Paying-Agent Agreement

There are numerous formats for paying-agent agreements. Banks generally have their own standard agreements, as does the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). A paying-agent agreement states the date of the agreement and the parties involved, along with the physical addresses, if applicable, where the principal amount will be kept. These agreements generally cite details of the offering—such as, "XYZ municipal government is offering $200,000,000 in floating-rate notes, due Aug. 10, 2019." The agreement could state that payment of principal and interest on the notes would be guaranteed by a guarantor or a trustee. The paying-agent agreement also describes the exact timing and method (when and how) the paying agent will deliver interest on the notes or other issued securities.