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PAYMUL D.97A

PAYMUL — EDIFACT Multiple Payment Order Message (D.97A)

The PAYMUL message is the bundled payment order sent by a corporate to its bank to execute multiple transfers in one interchange: suppliers, payroll, dividends or taxes. It carries debit and credit accounts, per-beneficiary amounts and execution terms. This page summarises the segment structure as published by UN/CEFACT for directory D.97A.

Purpose

The PAYMUL message is the bundled payment order sent by a corporate to its bank to execute multiple transfers in one interchange: suppliers, payroll, dividends or taxes. It carries debit and credit accounts, per-beneficiary amounts and execution terms.

This page focuses on the structure published by UN/CEFACT for directory D.97A. The segments listed, their status (M / C), position and repetition factor are extracted from the official file paymul_c.htm hosted on service.unece.org.

Segment structure

The PAYMUL D.97A message has 0 header entries, 0 detail entries and 0 summary entries (segments and groups combined). Groups are shown in bold and their members are indented by actual nesting depth.

No segment in this section.

Detail

No segment in this section.

Summary

No segment in this section.

Changes vs D.96A

Top-level differences between D.96A and D.97A for the PAYMUL message (segments directly inside header / detail / summary, ignoring nested groups). The comparison is indicative: a given tag may have evolved inside nested groups without showing up in this synthesis.

Segments removed vs D.96A

  • UNH in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • BGM in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • DTM in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • BUS in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • RFF in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • FII in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • CTA in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • COM in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • NAD in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • LIN in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • FCA in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • MOA in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • CUX in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • INP in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • FTX in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • GIS in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • LOC in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • RCS in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • PRC in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • SEQ in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • PAI in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • DOC in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • AJT in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • DLI in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • PIA in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • CNT in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • AUT in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.
  • UNT in the header section — present in D.96A but missing in D.97A at the same level.

Structural example

Minimal example of an PAYMUL D.97A message with mandatory segments only. The goal is to show the exact version declared in UNH (PAYMUL:D:97A:UN) — not to replicate a full business case (see the PAYMUL D.96A page for an annotated example).

edifact paymul-d97a-example.edi
UNB+UNOC:3+5410000000123:14+5410000000456:14+260514:1430+CTRL097001'
UNH+1+PAYMUL:D:97A:UN'
BGM+451+PAYMUL-2026-0042+9'
DTM+137:20260514:102'
DTM+203:20260520:102'
LIN+1'
BUS++17'
MOA+9:1240.00:EUR'
FII+OR+12345678901::25+EDIVERSE SAS:::FR7630001007941234567890185'
FII+BF+98765432109::25+SUPPLIER ONE:::FR7610107001011234567890123'
NAD+OY+5410000000123::9'
NAD+BE+5410000000456::9'
UNS+S'
MOA+86:1240.00:EUR'
CNT+39:1'
UNT+14+1'
UNZ+1+CTRL097001'

Common errors

  • Misaligned UNH tokens — The UNH+...+PAYMUL:D:97A:UN token must reflect exactly the directory in use — a mismatch between the UNH release and the release agreed with the partner is rejected by every strict validator.
  • Wrong UNT segment count — The value after UNT+ must include UNH and UNT themselves. By far the most common sender-side error, regardless of the directory in use.
  • Stale code lists — Between D.96A and D.97A, several code lists received new qualifiers (DTM status, RFF qualifier, NAD codes…). Reusing an older directory’s code tables triggers warnings or even rejections depending on the partner’s strict-conformance mode.

Other versions of this message available on ediverse.io: PAYMUL D.96A, PAYMUL D.01B, PAYMUL D.10A, PAYMUL D.16B, PAYMUL D.21B, PAYMUL D.24A, PAYMUL D.99B, PAYMUL D.00B, PAYMUL D.02B, PAYMUL D.05A, PAYMUL D.08A, PAYMUL D.13B, PAYMUL D.18B, PAYMUL D.20B.

X12 functional equivalent: X12 820.

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