- Revolut received approval to launch a fully licensed UK bank for its 13 million users
- Customer deposits will be protected under the UK’s £85,000 deposit insurance scheme
- The fintech’s crypto-friendly platform now competes directly with traditional banks
Revolut has officially crossed a major milestone in its evolution from fintech startup to full financial institution. After the UK Prudential Regulation Authority lifted restrictions on its banking license, Revolut Bank UK can now begin operating as a fully licensed bank.
For the company’s roughly 13 million customers in the United Kingdom, this shift means their accounts will soon function like traditional bank accounts rather than fintech wallets built on top of partner institutions.

Deposits Now Protected by UK Banking Guarantees
The new banking status allows Revolut customers to hold deposits protected under the UK’s Financial Services Compensation Scheme. Under the program, deposits are insured up to £85,000 if a bank fails.
This change gives Revolut the same deposit protections offered by established British banks, strengthening trust in the platform’s financial services.
The company plans to roll out its current account services gradually, beginning with a smaller group of users before expanding access to its full customer base.
From Fintech App to Full Banking Platform
Revolut originally launched as a financial super app rather than a traditional bank. The platform already offers currency exchange, payments, stock trading, and cryptocurrency trading within a single interface.
Its crypto services remain separate from the newly licensed banking entity and are not covered by deposit insurance. However, the combination of banking services and digital asset tools inside one ecosystem continues to differentiate Revolut from many traditional financial institutions.
Millions of users already rely on the app as a primary hub for managing money.
New Banking Powers Bring Lending Opportunities
Operating as a licensed bank opens the door for Revolut to offer new products that rely on a bank balance sheet. These could include lending services, credit products, and other financial offerings that were previously limited by its regulatory status.
Analysts say this shift puts Revolut in direct competition with established banks that have long dominated the UK financial sector.
The company’s technology-first approach could allow it to deliver these services faster and more efficiently than legacy institutions.

Revolut Expands Its Global Ambitions
The banking launch comes as Revolut pursues aggressive global expansion. The company has pledged about £3 billion in investment within the UK while targeting expansion into roughly 30 additional markets by 2030.
At the same time, Revolut is seeking a U.S. banking charter with federal regulators after previously abandoning plans to acquire an American bank.
The fintech is also participating in a UK regulatory sandbox testing fiat-backed stablecoins, showing how digital asset infrastructure may eventually integrate with traditional banking services.
A New Hybrid Model for Financial Services
Revolut’s evolution highlights a broader shift happening across global finance. A company that started as a payments app now holds the regulatory status of a bank while maintaining built-in crypto functionality.
Traditional banks built their systems over decades. Revolut enters the same regulatory environment with a modern technology stack and millions of existing customers already using its platform daily.
That combination could reshape competition across the financial industry.











