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neobanks

A neobank is a financial institution that provides banking services primarily through digital channels, with little or no physical branch network. Neobanks usually offer mobile apps and online platforms, and may operate on a banking license of their own or under a partner's license, depending on the country.

Origins and scope: The term emerged in the 2010s as fintechs sought to simplify retail banking. Early

Operations and regulation: Some neobanks hold full banking licenses; others partner with established banks to underwrite

Products and services: Core accounts, debit cards, real-time notifications, budgeting tools, and international transfers are common.

Global landscape: Notable neobanks include Starling Bank, Monzo, N26, Revolut, Chime, and Nubank. They operate in

Criticisms and challenges: Neobanks face profitability pressures, customer-service challenges, technical outages, and regulatory scrutiny. They compete

models
focused
on
basic
current
accounts
and
payments;
many
later
expanded
into
savings,
loans,
and
other
services
across
Europe,
North
America,
and
beyond.
deposits
and
payments.
Regulation
typically
covers
AML/KYC,
consumer
protection,
and
access
to
deposit
protection
schemes,
with
frameworks
varying
by
jurisdiction;
PSD2
in
the
EU
facilitates
open
banking.
Revenue
sources
include
card
interchange,
subscription
tiers,
and
cross-selling
of
financial
products,
while
costs
are
partly
reduced
by
limited
branch
networks
and
automated
processes.
multiple
markets
through
direct
licensing
or
local
partnerships,
and
often
emphasize
rapid
onboarding
and
user-friendly
interfaces.
with
traditional
banks
on
convenience
and
cost
but
must
balance
growth
with
compliance
and
funding.