Revolut wins UK banking license, launches FSCS-Protected Revolut Bank UK

Revolut secures a full UK banking license, rolling out FSCS‑protected deposits for 13 million users while keeping crypto trading outside deposit insurance.
Fintech giant Revolut has secured approval from the UK’s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) to launch Revolut Bank UK, bringing full banking status and deposit protection to roughly 13 million domestic users. The license is a structural shift: Revolut is no longer just a high-growth app riding on partner banks, but a regulated bank in its own right in one of the world’s most competitive financial markets.
Under the new authorization, Revolut Bank UK will offer deposit accounts covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS), with protection up to £85,000 per person. Customers will be migrated to the new banking platform in phases, a deliberate rollout aimed at avoiding operational blow-ups as the firm shifts from e‑money infrastructure to full-stack banking. Crucially, Revolut’s cryptocurrency trading arm will continue to operate through a separate entity and will not be covered by FSCS, preserving regulatory separation between traditional deposits and higher‑risk digital asset activities.
Strategically, Revolut is treating the license as a springboard rather than a finish line. The company has announced plans to invest £3 billion in the UK and create 1,000 high-skilled jobs, signalling to regulators and policymakers that it wants to be seen as core financial infrastructure, not just a retail trading front-end. The firm is also targeting expansion into 30 new markets worldwide by 2030, using the UK banking charter as proof of regulatory credibility when negotiating access in other jurisdictions.
For the broader market, the move tightens the race between app‑first fintechs and incumbent banks. Traditional lenders now face a competitor that combines a full banking license, a massive mobile-native user base, and a product mix spanning payments, savings, trading, and crypto under one brand. At the same time, Revolut’s decision to ring-fence crypto activity outside FSCS coverage shows how the post‑MiCA, post‑FTX environment is forcing even aggressive fintechs to draw hard lines between insured money and speculative assets.
If Revolut executes, its UK bank could become a template for hybrid fintech–crypto models: regulated deposits at the core, higher‑risk trading and digital asset products pushed to clearly demarcated perimeters. For users, the trade-off is straightforward: FSCS protection and bank‑grade oversight on cash, with crypto still very much “trade at your own risk.”




