TL;DR
- Revolut completed a secondary share sale that set the company’s valuation at $75 billion, led by Coatue, Greenoaks, Dragoneer, and Fidelity.
- The transaction provided liquidity to employees and strengthened strategic partnerships.
- The operation did not involve the issuance of new shares; employees sold existing holdings.
Revolut completed a secondary share sale that set the company’s valuation at $75 billion in a transaction led by Coatue, Greenoaks, Dragoneer, and Fidelity, with participation from a16z, Franklin Templeton, T. Rowe Price, and NVentures, NVIDIA’s venture capital arm.
The transaction offered liquidity to employees and deepened Revolut’s ties with strategic investors capable of providing technical and financial support for the company’s next stage of growth.
The operation allowed employees to sell their holdings; it was the fifth sale of this kind enabled by Revolut under its employee share program, a practice the company promoted to facilitate internal liquidity. The deal did not involve a primary issuance of shares: buyers acquired existing shares, which strengthened the valuation without diluting ownership.
Revolut Achieved Strong Performance and Prepares for Further Expansion
The $75B valuation was supported by robust financial results and accelerated growth. The company recorded $4.0B in revenue in 2024, a 72% year-over-year increase, and $1.4B in profit before tax, a 149% jump. In 2025, the company surpassed 65 million global customers, and Revolut Business reached $1B in annualized revenue, figures that the executive team presented as evidence of the viability of its business model and its international scalability.
NVentures’ participation also signaled industrial interest in areas such as artificial intelligence and advanced computing—capabilities Revolut seeks to integrate to improve fraud detection, product personalization, and operational efficiency. The management explained that these technological partnerships are part of a roadmap to transform the platform into a bank with global capabilities.
In 2025, Revolut secured key regulatory approvals and advanced the launch in strategic markets: it obtained final banking authorization in Mexico, received a banking incorporation license in Colombia, and is preparing its entry into India. The company considers these steps necessary to build what it defines as its goal: a fully operational bank across multiple jurisdictions with products tailored to local markets and a regulated operation

