Monzo Shuts Down US Operations, Focuses on Europe Ahead of London IPO
April 5, 2026 – 5:57 pm
In short:
Monzo announced on April 1, 2026, that it is closing its U.S. operations, halting new American sign-ups immediately and shutting existing accounts by June, while cutting approximately 50 roles. This decision follows the bank receiving a full banking license from the European Central Bank and the Central Bank of Ireland in December 2025, enabling expansion across the EU.
Monzo is leaving the United States. The UK-based challenger bank will cease accepting new American customers, cut approximately 50 US-based roles, and close all existing American accounts by June. In a statement, Monzo framed this as a strategic shift: “With a fast-growing customer base of 15 million in the UK and the growth opportunity our European banking license creates, we’re making a deliberate, strategic decision to focus on scaling in our home market and Europe.”
A Seven-Year Experiment with No Charter
Monzo announced its U.S. expansion plans in June 2019, launching a simplified app for American customers and partnering with Sutton Bank, an Ohio-based FDIC-insured institution, to hold deposits and issue debit cards. However, without a banking charter, Monzo faced structural limitations—it could not originate loans or compete directly in key revenue streams of U.S. retail banking.
After filing an application for a national bank charter with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) in April 2020, Monzo withdrew it in late 2021 due to regulator signals that it would not be approved. The company continued operating through partner institutions but never secured the necessary infrastructure for a viable U.S. business.
The European License and a New Direction
Monzo’s receipt of a full banking license from the ECB and CBI in December 2025 marked a turning point, enabling the bank to expand across the EU. This prompted Monzo to reorient its strategy, focusing on scaling up in Europe rather than the U.S. market. The company is now preparing for an IPO in London with a target valuation of between £6 billion and £7 billion.