Revolut is exploring a secondary share sale that would value the London-based digital bank at $115 billion, according to Bloomberg, a 53% jump from the $75 billion it achieved in November 2025.
Any deal would allow early investors and employees to cash out; a formal process could begin as soon as this month, though nothing has been finalised.
The move follows Revolut’s receipt of a full UK banking licence in March 2026 and its filing for a US national bank charter: two milestones that have materially changed what the company is worth and to whom.
Revolut, the London-based digital bank and financial super-app founded in 2015, is weighing a secondary share sale at a $115 billion valuation, according to Bloomberg, which cited people with knowledge of the matter who asked not to be identified.
If it closes at that figure, the London fintech would be worth more than Barclays and Deutsche Bank, and roughly on a par with BNP Paribas.










