Revolut has secured full authorization to operate as a bank in the United Kingdom, marking a pivotal moment for one of Europe’s most valuable fintech companies as it seeks to expand its product range and deepen its presence in its home market.
The regulatory approval allows Revolut to begin offering accounts as a fully licensed bank for both retail and corporate customers in the country. According to NewsTrackerToday, the milestone concludes a multi-year regulatory process that began in 2021 and represents a major step in the company’s effort to transition from a fast-growing fintech platform into a global banking institution.
Founded by Nikolay Storonsky and Vlad Yatsenko, Revolut has rapidly expanded its footprint across digital financial services, including payments, foreign exchange, investment tools, and cryptocurrency trading. The company reached a valuation of roughly $75 billion in 2025, positioning it among the most valuable private technology firms in Europe.
Nikolay Storonsky, co-founder and chief executive officer, described the authorization as a strategic turning point for the company. The UK remains Revolut’s largest and most mature market, making the ability to operate as a licensed bank a crucial step toward its ambition of building what Storonsky has called “a truly global financial institution.”
The approval follows an earlier stage of conditional authorization granted by the UK’s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) in July 2024. That initial license placed Revolut in a regulatory “mobilization phase,” limiting the amount of customer deposits it could hold to £50,000 per client while the company finalized operational and compliance frameworks. As NewsTrackerToday notes, the restrictions were designed to allow regulators to monitor the fintech firm’s transition toward full banking standards before expanding its balance sheet capacity.
Liam Anderson, financial markets analyst, explains that the move reflects a broader shift across the fintech sector as digital platforms increasingly seek full regulatory status. “Many fintech companies initially scale through payment services or digital wallets,” he notes. “However, long-term competitiveness often requires becoming a regulated bank capable of offering lending products and holding deposits at scale.”
Isabella Moretti, corporate strategy and M&A analyst, points out that regulatory approval significantly strengthens Revolut’s strategic position in Europe’s financial ecosystem. In her assessment, access to a full banking license enables the company to expand into lending and other capital-intensive services that generate more stable revenue streams compared with transaction-based fintech models.
Revolut’s expansion strategy extends well beyond the UK. Earlier this month the company confirmed that it had applied for a banking license in the United States, a move that could open access to one of the world’s largest financial markets. At the same time, the firm has outlined plans to enter approximately 30 additional countries by 2030, building on a global user base that has already surpassed 70 million customers.
The development highlights how fintech companies are increasingly evolving into full-scale financial institutions rather than remaining purely digital service platforms. Coverage by NewsTrackerToday has repeatedly emphasized that regulatory approval, capital strength, and geographic diversification are becoming decisive factors as the global fintech sector moves from rapid expansion toward long-term structural competition.
As Revolut advances its banking strategy, the UK authorization may serve as a foundation for broader global expansion. For industry observers and investors following the sector, News Tracker Today notes that the company’s transition into a regulated banking framework could reshape how large fintech platforms compete with traditional financial institutions in the years ahead.