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Guides10 min read·17 February 2026

Best Business Bank Accounts in Europe (2026)

European business accounts split into three worlds: traditional banks, licensed neobanks and EMIs. Each solves a different problem, and most established companies end up with at least two of them side by side.

What each provider actually offers

Traditional European banks provide the full stack: multi-currency accounts, revolving credit, term loans, trade finance, payroll integration, treasury products and relationship coverage. Pricing is high (monthly fees €25–€150, transaction fees on top) and onboarding takes weeks. The reason to use them is the credit line: a domestic bank that knows your business will extend working capital that no neobank will.

Licensed neobanks (Qonto in France/DE/ES/IT/PT, Finom, Revolut Business, N26 Business, Wise Business's licensed offshoots) provide modern onboarding, in-app invoicing and expense management, competitive FX and multi-user access. Qonto and Finom hold full payment or e-money licences; N26 Business and Revolut Business are on their parent bank licences (BaFin and Lithuanian ECB, respectively).

EMIs and dedicated cross-border payment platforms (Wise Business, Airwallex, Ebury) sit outside the traditional 'bank' bucket. They excel at multi-currency invoicing, local receiving accounts in 10+ currencies and mass payouts. They do not offer overdrafts, credit or DGS coverage.

How to choose by company profile

Freelancer or one-person Ltd/GmbH/SASU: a licensed neobank (Qonto Solo, Finom Solo, N26 Business) covers 90% of needs at €10–€20 per month. Add Wise Business for USD/GBP invoicing to non-EU clients.

Small SME (5–20 employees, single EU country): a domestic bank for lending relationships plus Qonto or Finom for daily operations and payroll. Wise Business or Airwallex if cross-border invoicing is more than incidental.

Multi-entity group (holding + subsidiaries in 2+ EU countries): a traditional bank with pan-European coverage (Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas, ING) for treasury and credit, plus an EMI for intercompany payments in multiple currencies. Consolidated multi-entity reporting is easier at neobanks than at incumbents.

Non-EU holding with EU subsidiaries: expect stricter onboarding at any provider. Baltic and Maltese banks specialise in this segment; Qonto and Finom accept most EU-registered entities regardless of shareholder residency.

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Fees, licences and safety

Neobank pricing runs €10–€40 per month at freelance and small-SME tiers, with per-user, per-transfer or per-card add-ons. Traditional banks bill €20–€150 per month plus per-transaction fees, but include relationship coverage that neobanks do not offer.

For deposit safety, only licensed banks (traditional or neobank on a full banking licence) offer DGS coverage up to €100,000 per depositor. EMIs safeguard client funds in a segregated account at a partner bank; if the EMI fails, safeguarding recovers most (often all) of the funds but is not a formal guarantee and may take months.

For any operating balance above €50,000 that must be liquid, favour a DGS-covered bank account. For working capital that clears in and out weekly (e.g. payment processor settlements), an EMI with strong safeguarding is operationally the right choice.

Frequently asked questions

  • There is no single best. Freelancers usually pick Qonto, Finom or N26 Business; SMEs pair one of these with a traditional bank for credit; multi-entity groups run a traditional bank plus an EMI.

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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.

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