Are Neobanks Actually Safe?
Monzo, Revolut, Wise & Chase
- The Honest Answer
Monzo has over 9 million UK customers. Revolut has 45 million globally. Wise moves over £10 billion every month. These are not small startups anymore. But the question people keep asking is the right one: when you put your money into an app-only bank with no branches, what actually happens to it if things go wrong?
What is a neobank?
A neobank is a financial institution that operates entirely through a mobile app and website - no physical branches, no tellers, no high-street presence. They're sometimes called "digital banks", "challenger banks", or "app-only banks". The distinction matters: some are fully licensed banks in their own right; others are financial technology companies that hold your money through an arrangement with a licensed bank.
The appeal is obvious. Neobanks typically offer a slicker experience than traditional banks, instant transaction notifications, better foreign exchange rates, integrated budgeting tools, and - often - higher interest rates on savings. The absence of branch infrastructure significantly reduces their cost base, and many pass those savings to customers.
But "neobank" is a broad term that covers a wide spectrum of regulatory status. That spectrum is exactly where the safety question gets interesting.
The most important thing to understand about neobank safety: it depends entirely on the specific institution's regulatory status. Some neobanks are fully licensed banks with complete FSCS/FDIC protection. Others are e-money institutions where your protection works differently. Knowing the difference matters before you deposit significant sums.
How neobanks actually work - the two models
Not all neobanks work the same way behind the scenes. There are two fundamentally different operating models, and they have real implications for how safe your money is.
Model 1: Licensed Bank
The neobank holds a full banking licence from the regulator (FCA in the UK, OCC/Federal Reserve in the US). Customer deposits are covered by government deposit protection schemes - FSCS up to £85,000 in the UK; FDIC up to $250,000 in the US. The neobank can lend your deposited money out to earn interest.
Model 2: E-Money Institution
The company holds an e-money licence, not a banking licence. Customer funds must be "safeguarded" - held separately from company assets in a ring-fenced account, usually with a major bank. These funds are NOT covered by FSCS, but are protected from company insolvency through the safeguarding requirement. Less protection, but not zero protection.
This distinction is not about reputation, size, or how polished the app is. A large, well-known neobank on the e-money model gives you less formal protection than a smaller but fully licensed bank. This is why the specific regulatory status of each provider matters.
Obtaining a full banking licence is an intensive, expensive, multi-year process. Many fintechs start with an e-money licence to get to market faster, then apply for a full banking licence as they grow. Revolut is the most prominent example of this in the UK. This is not inherently suspicious - it's the regulatory pathway the system provides.
Major neobanks - safety status and full profile
Here's an honest, up-to-date breakdown of the major neobanks across the UK, US, Canada, and Australia - their protection status, what they offer, and who they're best suited to.
Monzo is a fully authorised UK bank - not an e-money institution. It received its banking licence in 2017 and your deposits are protected by the FSCS in exactly the same way as Barclays, HSBC, or any other high-street bank. Up to £85,000 per person is guaranteed by the government.
Monzo offers current accounts, savings pots (both instant access and fixed-term), a cash ISA, joint accounts, and a Monzo Plus/Premium subscription with additional features. Their savings rates are consistently competitive with, and often slightly above, major high-street banks.
Revolut's regulatory journey is the most important to understand of any major neobank. For years it operated as an e-money institution in the UK, meaning customer funds were safeguarded but not FSCS protected. In July 2024, Revolut was granted a UK banking licence by the PRA.
However, receiving a banking licence and becoming a fully operating bank are not the same thing. As of early 2025, Revolut is in a "mobilisation" phase - transitioning to full banking operations. During this period, customer funds continue to be safeguarded rather than FSCS covered. Revolut has confirmed this transition is underway, with a target of full authorisation in 2025.
Wise is primarily an international money transfer platform that has evolved into a multi-currency account. It operates as an e-money institution - not a fully licensed bank - which means customer funds are safeguarded but not covered by FSCS. Wise holds customer funds in highly rated government bonds and cash at major financial institutions, separated from their operational funds.
Wise is not designed as a savings account. It's exceptional at what it does - international transfers at interbank exchange rates with transparent fees, and a multi-currency account holding 40+ currencies simultaneously. For someone paying international suppliers or receiving income in multiple currencies, Wise is genuinely excellent. For someone wanting to earn competitive interest on UK savings, it's not the right tool.
Chase UK is the UK consumer banking arm of JPMorgan Chase - one of the world's largest banks. It launched in the UK in 2021 as a digital-only bank and is fully FCA-authorised with complete FSCS protection up to £85,000. The combination of a major global institution's financial backing and full regulatory protection makes Chase UK one of the safest neobank options available in the UK.
Chase UK has built a reputation for consistently competitive savings rates - often near the top of the easy-access market - combined with 1% cashback on everyday spending (up to £15/month) for the first year. No monthly fee. No minimum balance.
EQ Bank is the digital banking arm of Equitable Bank - a Schedule I Canadian chartered bank. Deposits are covered by the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC) up to CA$100,000 per depositor category. EQ Bank consistently offers some of the highest savings rates in Canada, often 10-20 times the rates offered by the Big Six banks.
For Canadian savers, EQ Bank is arguably the best first port of call for high-interest savings - particularly their TFSA savings Account, where you get a competitive rate and complete tax-free status on interest earned.
Side-by-side safety comparison
Here's a clear comparison of protection status across major neobanks and a couple of traditional banks for context.
| Institution | Country | Licence Type | Protection Scheme | Limit | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chase UK | 🇬🇧 | Full bank (JPMorgan) | FSCS | £85,000 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Monzo | 🇬🇧 | Full bank licence | FSCS | £85,000 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Barclays (traditional) | 🇬🇧 | Full bank | FSCS | £85,000 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Revolut | 🇬🇧 | Banking licence (2024) - transitioning | Safeguarded (FSCS pending) | Safeguarded | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Wise | 🇬🇧 | E-money institution | Safeguarded - not FSCS | Safeguarded | ⭐⭐⭐ |
| EQ Bank | 🇨🇦 | Full bank (Equitable) | CDIC | CA$100,000 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Wealthsimple | 🇨🇦 | Investment dealer + trust | CDIC (cash) + CIPF | Varies by account | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Up Bank | 🇦🇺 | Full bank (Bendigo backed) | FCS (APRA) | AUD $250,000 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| SoFi | 🇺🇸 | Full bank licence | FDIC | $250,000 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Chime | 🇺🇸 | Fintech (partner banks) | FDIC (via partners) | $250,000 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
Regulatory status can change. Always verify the current protection status of any institution before depositing large sums. Information accurate as of early 2025.
Neobank vs traditional bank - the honest trade-offs
The question is never really "which is better" - it's "which is better for what?" Neobanks and traditional banks have genuinely different strengths, and most financially switched-on people use both.
- Higher interest rates on savings - often 5x more
- Zero or very low fees - no monthly account charges
- Instant transaction notifications and real-time balance
- Better foreign exchange rates (especially Wise, Revolut)
- Slicker, faster app experience
- Easier to open - no branch visits, 10 minutes online
- Better budgeting and spending analytics
- Faster customer service via in-app chat
- Physical branches for complex transactions
- Relationship managers for business or mortgage needs
- More established track record across market cycles
- More complete product range - mortgages, insurance, investments
- Cash deposits and withdrawals at counters
- Often more accommodating for complex situations
Which neobank is right for you?
Answer three quick questions and we'll point you in the right direction based on your primary need.
Five things to check before depositing in any neobank
These checks take five minutes and could save you from a genuinely problematic situation. Do them every time, not just once.
- Verify the regulatory status. Search the FCA Register (register.fca.org.uk) in the UK. Check whether the firm is a fully authorised bank or an e-money institution. This tells you exactly what protection applies. Don't rely on marketing copy - check the register.
- Confirm deposit protection coverage. Is your balance covered by FSCS (UK), FDIC (US), CDIC (Canada), or FCS (Australia)? Or is it "safeguarded"? The difference matters significantly for large balances.
- Keep large sums below the protection limit. Even with full FSCS or FDIC protection, don't keep more than the limit at a single institution. The simplest safety strategy: multiple banks, each below the protection threshold.
- Check the rate terms carefully. Some neobank savings rates come with conditions - minimum monthly deposits, maximum balance caps, or limited-time bonus rates. A 5.1% headline rate that requires a £500 monthly deposit is not the same as an unconditional 5.1%.
- Don't use an e-money account as your only account. If you hold significant savings with a safeguarded institution, also maintain an account at a fully licensed bank or building society. Spreading banking risk is as sensible as spreading investment risk.