Revolut Surges to $75B Valuation After Major Share Sale and Global Expansion Push
Neobank giant Revolut has reached a stunning $75 billion valuation following a private share sale backed by some of the world’s largest investment firms — a milestone that cements its position as one of the highest-valued fintech companies globally.
The latest deal drew participation from Coatue, Greenoaks, Fidelity and Dragoneer, with further support from a16z, Franklin Templeton and T. Rowe Price. Nvidia’s venture capital arm, NVentures, also joined the round, underscoring continued investor appetite for large-scale fintech and crypto-enabled platforms.
Revolut confirmed that the transaction included an employee liquidity event, allowing staff to sell shares for the fifth time since the company’s founding.
Founded in 2015 and headquartered in London, Revolut offers digital banking services, cross-border payments and integrated crypto trading through its app. The valuation jump follows a year of rapid global expansion, including new banking licenses in Mexico and Colombia and preparations for a major rollout in India.
The company’s financials have kept pace with its growth: revenue climbed 72% to $4 billion in 2024, while profit before tax soared 149% to $1.4 billion. Revolut also surpassed 65 million retail users in 2025, with its business banking division crossing $1 billion in annualized revenue.
Revolut’s crypto footprint has also widened. Since October, the firm has been authorized to offer regulated digital-asset services across all 30 countries in the European Economic Area after securing a MiCA license from Cyprus’ securities regulator.
Amid its expansion, Revolut is reportedly exploring a dual public listing in both London and New York, according to a September report from The Times. Such a move would make it one of the largest fintech IPOs in recent years.
Crypto Firms Eyes A Position In Wall Street
Revolut’s soaring valuation lands during a wave of crypto and blockchain companies entering public markets — a trend analysts expect to continue through 2026.
June marked Circle’s highly anticipated listing on the New York Stock Exchange, bringing the USDC stablecoin issuer to the public markets. By September, blockchain lender Figure and crypto exchange Gemini had also gone public, debuting on Nasdaq within days of each other.
Several other companies are also eyeing a potential IPO in the future, which includes BitGo, who filed for a U.S IPO in September; Kraken who filed for an IPO in November, and Grayscale, who have also announced plans to list shares on the NYSE.