Best Digital Banks in Europe (2026): A Regulator-Aware Ranking
Not every "digital bank" is actually a bank. A regulator-aware ranking of the five most important European players — with the licence, DGS coverage and product profile that matters most.
What counts as a "digital bank" in Europe
The colloquial term "digital bank" covers everything from Revolut (Lithuanian banking licence) to Wise (e-money licence) to smaller fintech current accounts operating on top of another institution's licence. From a customer-safety point of view, the distinction is crucial: only a bank licensed under the EU's CRR/CRD IV framework offers Deposit Guarantee Scheme coverage on customer balances up to €100,000.
In this ranking we cover only full banks. E-money institutions like Wise are excellent products but their client-money safeguarding regime is a different — and more limited — protection than DGS.
The five banks below are the most operationally significant digital-first banks in the European market in 2026, chosen for licence status, cross-border availability and product depth.
Who each digital bank is genuinely best for
Revolut is best for feature breadth and card-spend. Now a fully licensed Lithuanian bank with over 45 million customers, it packages current accounts, cards, savings, stocks, crypto, business banking and even mobile telecom under one roof. Best for: users who want everything in one app and accept some paywall structure.
N26 is best for a clean EUR-first primary account. German bank licence, DGS-covered up to €100,000, and a strict focus on making a good current account rather than sprawling into ten adjacent products. Best for: EU residents who want a boring, well-executed bank.
Bunq is best for sub-IBAN organisation and sustainability positioning. Dutch bank licence, up to 25 sub-IBANs under a single login, and a distinctive brand around greener consumer banking. Best for: users who want structured money organisation and appreciate the sustainability angle.
Monzo is best for UK residents. UK banking licence, FSCS coverage up to £85,000. Not available to EU-only residents but essential for UK-EU cross-border users. Best for: anyone with UK banking needs.
Trade Republic is best for the banking–investing overlap. Registered as a full bank in Germany since 2023, it pays competitive interest on uninvested cash (2.75% at January 2026) and offers a card that rounds up spending into ETF investments. Best for: cost-conscious retail investors who want a broker with a real bank licence.
The five leading digital banks compared
| Bank | Licence | DGS coverage | Cash interest (Jan 2026) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revolut | Lithuania — bank | €100,000 (LT) | Up to 2.50% (Metal, EUR) | All-in-one super-app |
| N26 | Germany — bank | €100,000 (DE) | Instant Savings ~2.00% | Clean EUR primary account |
| Bunq | Netherlands — bank | €100,000 (NL) | Up to 2.46% (Easy Investments) | Sub-IBAN organisation |
| Monzo | United Kingdom — bank | £85,000 (FSCS) | Instant Access ~3.85% | UK residents |
| Trade Republic | Germany — bank | €100,000 (DE) | 2.75% on uninvested cash | Broker–bank hybrid |
What to check before switching
First, the licence — is this a bank or an EMI? A quick way to check: search the European Banking Authority's credit institutions register for the entity name. If it's not there, it's not a bank.
Second, the DGS jurisdiction. A Lithuanian-licensed bank is covered by the Lithuanian DGS, not the German one, even if you use it in Germany. All EU DGSs guarantee €100,000, but administrative payout speed and past track record differ.
Third, direct-debit and salary-credit acceptance in your country. A German employer can pay a Lithuanian IBAN — but some payroll systems still trip on non-domestic IBANs despite it being illegal under the IBAN Discrimination rule. Test with a small transfer before switching your salary.
Fourth, savings and investment features. If you want interest on cash, check the actual rate — many digital banks offer notably better rates than incumbents. If you invest, check whether the bank is a full broker or partners with a third party.
Frequently asked questions
- If it holds a full banking licence and is DGS-covered, the customer-protection level is identical to a traditional bank — €100,000 per depositor per bank.
Related on Banks.eu
Informational purpose only. Rates and product terms change frequently — always verify with the issuing institution before opening an account. Some links may be affiliate or partner links and never influence editorial rankings.


