Revolut hits $75B valuation in new capital raise



Revolut has raised new funding in a share sale that values it at $75 billion, positioning the British neobank as one of Europe’s most valuable private tech companies.

The company said on Monday the deal was led by Coatue, Greenoaks, Dragoneer and Fidelity. Investors including Nvidia’s NVentures, Andreessen Horowitz, Franklin Templeton, and other backers advised by T. Rowe Price Associates also participated.

Revolut did not mention how much it raised in the share sale, but it did say it allowed employees to cash out in the deal. As of August 2025, the company had a post-money valuation of $48 billion, and has raised a total of $2.89 billion in venture capital, according to PitchBook.

Founded in 2015, Revolut offers a range of services spanning multi-currency accounts, payment and transfer services, crypto products, insurance and more. The new funding comes as the neobank has been pouring truckloads of cash into expanding its operations internationally.

Besides the U.K., where the company is awaiting a final nod to operate as a full-fledged bank, Revolut has a banking license in the European Union, and it operates in Australia, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, Brazil, and the U.S. It launched operations in India in October, is about to start operating in Colombia in 2026, and has received a banking license in Mexico.

It also has plans to launch in Argentina, wants to enter Africa (first with South Africa), and has an in-principal payments license in the UAE.

The company’s been doing well financially, too: in 2024, its revenue rose 72% to $4 billion, and it claims it reached $1 billion in annualized revenue this year. Per its last annual report, Revolut reported net profit of $1 billion (£790 million) in 2024. The company also launched a crypto exchange, Revolut X, part of its Wealth division, which saw revenue rise 298% to $647 million in 2024 from just $158 million in 2023.

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The company has grand ambitions, aiming to reach 100 million customers by mid-2027, and enter over 30 new markets by 2030.

“This milestone reflects the remarkable progress we have made in the last twelve months towards our vision of building the first truly global bank, serving 100 million customers across 100 countries,” Nik Storonsky, CEO and co-founder of Revolut, said in a statement.




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