Revolut Just Rewired Europe’s Tech Valuation League Table
The neobank has a $75 billion price tag and an appetite for world domination
Revolut has decided it is not finished breaking records. The British neobank has secured fresh funding at a valuation of $75 billion, a figure that instantly places it among Europe’s most valuable private tech companies.
It is a big number, even by fintech standards, and it signals that investors still believe the London upstart has plenty of runway left.
The company said the deal was led by Coatue, Greenoaks, Dragoneer and Fidelity. Nvidia’s NVentures joined the round, alongside Andreessen Horowitz, Franklin Templeton and other funds linked to T. Rowe Price Associates.
Revolut kept one detail to itself: how much cash actually changed hands. What it did say is that the share sale allowed employees to cash out, which is usually a sign of a confident cap table rather than a distressed one.
As of August 2025, Revolut was valued at $48 billion and had raised about $2.89 billion in venture capital. The new price tag represents a sharp step up for a business that started in 2015,
offering multi-currency accounts and has since morphed into a roaming financial super-app. Payments, transfers, crypto trading, insurance, travel perks, stock investing: if it touches money, Revolut probably wants a slice of it.
That ambition has not been cheap. The company has been pouring serious cash into global expansion.
It is still waiting for final approval to operate as a full bank in the UK, but it already holds a banking licence in the European Union. It operates in Australia, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, Brazil and the United States.
It pushed into India in October, plans to launch in Colombia in 2026 and recently secured a banking licence in Mexico. Argentina is on the list, as is South Africa, and its payments licence in the UAE is already in motion.
Under the hood, the numbers are moving in the right direction. Revolut says its 2024 revenue jumped 72 percent to $4 billion. It claims annualised revenue has already reached $1 billion this year.
Its last annual report showed net profit of $1 billion, equivalent to about £790 million. The company has also been building out its Wealth division. Revolut X, its crypto exchange, generated $647 million in 2024, up from $158 million in 2023.
The customer targets are even bolder. The company wants to hit 100 million users by mid 2027. It also plans to break into more than 30 new markets by 2030. This is not a business thinking small.
Chief executive and co-founder Nik Storonsky said the new valuation reflects the progress made in the past year and the vision of building what he calls the first truly global bank, one that serves 100 million customers across 100 countries.
The destination may sound grand. The trajectory, judging by the latest cheque, is very real.