Revolut is weighing a potential share sale for the second half of this year, which reports suggest could up its valuation to around $100bn.
Last year, the fintech became Europe’s most valuable scaleup following a series of secondary transactions that priced the company at $75bn, up from $45bn in 2024.
Investors have been pushing for a new share sale that would value Revolut at $100bn, according to people familiar with the matter cited by Bloomberg. Deliberations are still ongoing and no decisions had been taken over the size and timing, the people said.
Initially founded as a travel finance app in 2015, Revolut is a UK-based digital bank providing a smorgasbord of financial services including international money transfer, crypto and stock trading and even pet insurance.
A new Revolut share sale would be the latest example of a European scaleup using secondaries to increase their valuation. German investment app Trade Republic secured a €12.5bn price tag in November through a secondary sale, and AI company ElevenLabs used a tender offer to double its valuation to $6.6bn last September.
The interest in a potential share sale comes amid speculation Revolut will eventually file to go public — some of the people cited by Bloomberg said the company is targeting a valuation of at least $150bn through a listing.
A Revolut spokesperson declined to comment.



