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Europe Moves to Standardize Open Banking APIs Across Borders to Accelerate Cross-Border Payments

January 14, 2026

Europe Standardises Open Banking APIs: A Turning Point for Cross‑Border Payments and Fintech Scale

Introduction & context: from fragmented APIs to a European payment layer

Europe is taking a decisive step toward harmonising Open Banking APIs across borders, with the objective of accelerating cross‑border payments, improving interoperability, and reducing friction for both financial institutions and end users. What began under PSD2 as a compliance‑driven obligation is now evolving into a strategic infrastructure layer for European payments.

For years, Open Banking in Europe has suffered from fragmentation: different API standards, uneven data quality, inconsistent uptime, and country‑specific interpretations of regulation. This has limited its real impact on cross‑border payments and kept account‑to‑account use cases largely domestic. The current move toward standardisation reflects a shared understanding among banks, regulators, payment schemes, and fintechs that Open Banking must evolve beyond national silos to support a truly integrated European payments market.

For founders, CEOs, CFOs, COOs, and risk leaders across fintechs, EMIs, PSPs, neobanks, crypto platforms, and high‑risk merchants, this shift is not abstract. It directly affects how payment flows are designed, how banking partners assess risk, and how scalable cross‑border business models can realistically be built.

What this means for European payments, SEPA and instant transfers

Standardising Open Banking APIs across Europe changes the role of account‑to‑account payments.…

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Riding the Rise of Embedded Finance: What Stripe’s New European Toolkit Signals for Banks

December 17, 2025

Riding the Rise of Embedded Finance: What Stripe’s New European Toolkit Signals for Banks

Introduction & Context

The evolution of European payments has shifted again. Stripe’s newly expanded embedded finance toolkit for Europe—combining banking-as-a-service capabilities, faster payouts, compliance modules, and deeper connectivity with bank partners—marks another major step in the migration from standalone financial products toward fully integrated financial infrastructure inside platforms. Stripe aims to equip SaaS companies, marketplaces, and fintech builders with the tools to embed accounts, cards, payments, and lending directly into their user journeys. This is not just a product expansion; it is part of a wider transformation where traditional banking, card schemes, and alternative payment rails converge into programmable layers. For EMIs, PSPs, crypto platforms, high-risk merchants, and payment-first businesses, this signals a tightening competitive landscape and a higher bar for speed, compliance, and partner orchestration.

What Stripe’s Move Means for European Payments

The news points to several clear trends. First, embedded finance is maturing away from “nice to have” features and into core infrastructure. Platforms increasingly expect near-instant onboarding, SEPA and SWIFT access, multi-IBAN issuing, automated KYC/KYB flows, and instant settlement—features once limited to regulated institutions. Second, banks are becoming infrastructure providers rather than direct distributors of financial products.…

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How to Issue SEPA IBANs with a Non-EU Regulated Firm

April 22, 2025

How to Issue SEPA IBANs with a Non-EU Regulated Firm

Introduction

With the rise of global fintech, firms based outside the European Union are increasingly interested in offering euro-denominated accounts and SEPA IBANs to customers. But is it possible for a non-EU regulated entity to issue SEPA-compliant IBANs? The answer is yes—with the right partnerships and structure. In this article, we explore how it works.

Can Non-EU Companies Issue SEPA IBANs?

While SEPA participation is managed by European institutions, there are legitimate pathways for non-EU regulated firms to offer SEPA IBANs by partnering with licensed EU financial institutions or Banking-as-a-Service (BaaS) platforms.

Understanding SEPA

SEPA (Single Euro Payments Area) allows seamless euro transfers across 36 countries. Issuing an IBAN that works within SEPA requires access to a payment account managed by a SEPA participant.

Legal Routes to Offer SEPA IBANs as a Non-EU Firm

1. Partnering with an EU-Based EMI or PI

Many Electronic Money Institutions (EMIs) and Payment Institutions (PIs) in Europe offer white-label IBAN issuing solutions. These allow non-EU firms to operate under the EMI’s regulatory umbrella.

2. Using Banking-as-a-Service (BaaS) Providers

BaaS platforms such as Solaris, Treezor, or Swan provide turnkey infrastructure, including SEPA connectivity and IBAN issuing.

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Banking As A Service and Embedded Finance

August 24, 2024

Banking as a Service (BaaS) and Embedded Finance are two related concepts but they serve different purposes in the financial services landscape. Here’s a breakdown of each:

Banking as a Service (BaaS)

  • Definition: BaaS refers to the backend services that banks offer to fintech companies and other businesses to provide financial services without needing to build their own banking infrastructure.
  • Core Functionality: It includes APIs that allow third parties to integrate banking services (like payments, deposit accounts, loans, etc.) into their products.
  • Target Users: Primarily aimed at fintech companies, startups, or any business looking to include banking functionalities without the complexity of compliance and regulation.
  • Examples: Examples include companies like Solarisbank or Synapse that provide banking services to other businesses, enabling them to offer banking capabilities to their customers.

Embedded Finance

  • Definition: Embedded Finance refers to the integration of financial services into non-financial products or platforms, making financial transactions seamless for users.
  • Core Functionality: It involves incorporating financial services like payments, lending, or insurance directly into existing platforms (like e-commerce websites, apps, or marketplaces) without redirecting users to traditional banking interfaces.
  • Target Users: Aimed at businesses from various industries (such as retail, travel, or technology) that want to enhance their customer experience by offering financial products.
…
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