No. There is no statutory regulator, licence or register for process agents in the UK, and the service is not a regulated legal activity. Quality is instead evidenced voluntarily: independently audited certifications, client due diligence practices, permanent premises and track record are the marks that separate professional agents from an address on a letterhead.
What the absence of regulation means
Anyone can call themselves a process agent, which is exactly why counterparty solicitors care who is named in the clause. A professional agent is not your legal counsel and does not provide regulated legal services; the role is operational, receiving and forwarding documents flawlessly, and the risks are operational too: an unstaffed address, an unlogged claim form, a missed deadline. Regulation would not fix those; process does.
The standards that substitute for a licence
Independently audited management systems are the strongest external evidence available. Tremark Process Agents holds ISO 9001 for quality management and ISO 27001 for information security, both certified by the British Assessment Bureau, a UKAS accredited body, together with the UK government backed Cyber Essentials accreditation. We also complete client due diligence on every appointment, which protects the integrity of the service for everyone who relies on it.
How to protect yourself as a client
Apply the tests in our choosing a provider answer: permanence, certifications, published fees, speed and independence, and favour agents who will show you their receipt and notification process before you sign. The clause your counterparty drafted assumes the agent will still be functioning years from now; choose one built to be.