Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

UK fintech firm Revolut sets up in UAE

UAE Revolut Revolut
UK-based Revolut offers banking and trading services through an app
  • Company hiring in Dubai
  • Presence could be ‘wake up call’
  • Valued at $33bn in 2021

The British fintech firm Revolut is expanding to the UAE in what experts believe is the start of a wave of similar UK companies setting up in the region.

The digital platform, which offers banking and trading services through an app, is recruiting for legal and strategy roles in Dubai.

The company has hired Jonathan Moore, a former strategy manager at Careem, the Dubai-based super-app, as its head of UAE for strategy and operations.

A spokesperson from Revolut confirmed to AGBI that the bank was hiring for roles in the UAE, but declined to share details of the company’s expansion plans.

Prashant Gulati, an investor in the US-based alternative banking institution Truly Financial, described Revolut’s entry as putting “the cat among the pigeons”.

“It’s going to be a wake-up call for staid and lazy incumbents, who haven’t got a worthwhile digital banking strategy or are being slow or not very innovative,” he said.

Revolut, founded in 2015, rapidly gained in popularity across Europe by providing fee-free currency exchange and a linked payment card. 

It has broadened its services to include savings accounts, stock and crypto trading and peer-to-peer payments.

The company achieved a valuation of $33 billion in 2021, and says it has more than 35 million customers and some 500,000 businesses using its products.

Its ambition is to secure a full UK banking licence, which would enable it to directly accept deposits and expand lending activities, instead of outsourcing these functions to other UK-licensed banks.

Revolut confirmed that its UK bank licence application is ongoing and that it has no plans to shift its global base to the UAE.

The consulting firm Kantar’s 2023 list of the UK’s most valuable brands ranked Revolut as the third highest ranked financial services company. It was ranked in 15th place, behind HSBC and Barclays, which are ranked second and 11th respectively.

The UK and the UAE signed an agreement earlier this month to strengthen ties on financial services that its backers hope will provide a boost to fintech, which is among the UK’s strongest startup sectors. 

Its 20 fintech unicorns, those with a value of $1 billion or more, make up around half of the UK total.

Pritam Basu, founder and CEO of Boseman, a UK-headquartered credit, investment and payment fintech, said the agreement could open up opportunities for UK companies to explore new markets, an appealing prospect given the “very saturated” landscape of fintech products in the UK.

The veteran banker Suvo Sarkar, founder of the digital bank Liv, said UK fintechs offer products the UAE market “is really crying out for”.

Sarkar said that although challengers were unlikely to worry legacy banks, fintechs were gradually gaining market share.

Latest articles

Alcohol tax in Dubai was suspended in 2023

Dubai to reintroduce 30% alcohol tax

Dubai will reintroduce the 30 percent sales tax on alcohol in January, according to an email sent by a local alcohol distributor to venues in the city.  The correspondence sent by MMI, which also operates off licences in the city, said: “Please note, Dubai Government have informed us the 30 percent municipality tax on alcoholic […]

EDB food wheat farm sharjah

EDB hails $305m in financing for agriculture businesses

One dirham in 12 lent by Emirates Development Bank in the past three years has gone into financing for agriculture technology and food production businesses, the bank said on Thursday. EDB said the AED1.12 billion ($305 million) of loans represent 8 percent of the AED14.72 billion of financing it has provided since April 2021.  It […]

The oil market could now shift focus to the actions of US President-elect Donald Trump

Opec+ delays oil output hike until April

Opec+ on Thursday pushed back the start of oil output rises by three months until April and extended the full unwinding of cuts by a year until the end of 2026 due to weak demand and booming production outside the group. Cuts had been scheduled to begin unwinding from October 2024 but a slowdown in […]

Animal, Bird, Chicken

Almarai to foray into food segments beyond dairy

Almarai, the largest dairy producer in Saudi Arabia, will launch seafood and red meat facilities to help achieve the Vision 2030 goal of becoming food self-reliant. The company is building domestic production facilities for seafood and beef and lamb, which will become operational in two years, Bloomberg reported, citing CEO Abdullah Albader. In March, Almarai […]