Revolut has secured fresh funding through a new share sale that places its valuation at $75 billion, making the British neobank one of Europe’s most valuable private tech companies. The company said the deal was led by Coatue, Greenoaks, Dragoneer and Fidelity, with participation from Nvidia’s NVentures, Andreessen Horowitz, Franklin Templeton, and other investors advised by T. Rowe Price Associates. Although Revolut did not disclose the total amount raised, it confirmed that the transaction allowed employees to sell some of their shares.
The neobank’s latest valuation represents a major jump from its post-money valuation of $48 billion in August 2025, as recorded by PitchBook. Launched in 2015, Revolut has grown into a broad financial services platform offering multi-currency accounts, global payments, transfers, crypto trading, insurance, and more. The fresh investment comes at a time when the company is aggressively scaling its operations across multiple continents. Revolut already holds a banking license in the EU, awaits final approval to operate fully as a bank in the U.K., and is active in markets including Australia, Japan, Singapore, New Zealand, Brazil, India, and the U.S.
Revolut is currently preparing to begin operations in Colombia in 2026 and has secured a banking license in Mexico. It is also planning expansions into Argentina and Africa, starting with South Africa, while holding an in-principal payments license in the UAE. The company’s rapid global push is buoyed by strong financial performance. Revenue surged 72 percent to $4 billion in 2024, while net profit reached $1 billion. Its crypto exchange, Revolut X, posted explosive growth within the Wealth division, recording revenue of $647 million in 2024, up from $158 million the previous year.
With its new valuation and expanded investor backing, Revolut is aiming even higher. The company plans to reach 100 million customers by mid-2027 and to enter more than 30 additional markets by 2030. Co-founder and CEO Nik Storonsky said the milestone reflects the company’s accelerating progress toward building “the first truly global bank” capable of serving customers across 100 countries
