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Revolut’s fintech expansion across Europe and globally is severely constraining the playing field for European fintech founders. Attempting to build a European-scale fintech — which means competing directly with Revolut — has become extremely challenging, both from a product and marketing perspective.
By September 2025, Revolut reached 65 million customers worldwide, with 12 million in the UK alone. The company has also announced a firm timeline for serving 100 million customers, aiming to hit this milestone by mid-2027. As a result, the window of opportunity for European fintech development is rapidly narrowing. Entrepreneurs are left with only two viable options: either build a super-niche project, both in terms of product and geography — think local payment services — or exploit Revolut’s main blind spot. In their pursuit of banking licenses and regulatory relationships, they haven’t been developing crypto services with sufficient intensity.
The latter model offers several compelling advantages. Due to certain characteristics of the European startup scene, a crypto-finance project has excellent chances for global expansion, or at a minimum, pan-European growth.
The rollout of Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation has given crypto projects a major boost — not because it specifically permitted or prohibited anything, but simply because it established clear, understandable frameworks for what a project must comply with to stay compliant in Europe.
There’s an unusual side effect to this regulation: MiCA enhances trust in crypto projects beyond Europe’s borders. For example, in Latin American markets, it creates an extremely positive attitude from regulators toward projects, so it becomes a notable green flag.
Compared to the US, hiring employees in Europe is significantly cheaper. Hiring one engineer in the US is equivalent to hiring two or three in Europe. It’s worth noting that in Europe, you can recruit the same developers or product managers from Revolut itself, which definitely makes sense in the context of expansion.
Cryptocurrency turnover is actively growing in Europe. Even our own statistics confirm that users are interested in receiving stablecoins to their accounts and using them as a means of payment.
While fintech attracted less and less money in recent years, the situation is now changing.
Part of this money is flowing into crypto, as the sector becomes institutionalized through MiCA. A license significantly capitalizes a company, transforming it in investors’ eyes from an unproven concept into a clearly understood fintech company.
Despite being a major benefit, MiCa still hasn’t fully solved compliance. Current legislation and regulators still stumble over crypto-specific issues when it comes to how businesses earn and spend money in crypto form. Moreover, since we’re dealing with an extremely young fintech instrument, tax incentives could facilitate its development and growth.
So if you’re feeling the pressure from Revolut on your European fintech business, we strongly advise taking a serious look at the crypto-finance market. Europe provides numerous benefits to fintech businesses that they can leverage for global expansion.


