Best UK Banks 2026/27 — Bank Reviews and Comparison Guide

Wise vs Revolut 2026 — Which Money Transfer App Is Best?

Wise vs Revolut compared for international transfers, travel money, and everyday use — fees, exchange rates, safety, features, and which is best for your situation.

Wise and Revolut are the two most popular apps for sending money internationally and spending abroad. They serve overlapping but distinct needs — and the right choice depends heavily on what you are actually trying to do with your money.

Wise was built from the ground up as a money transfer service. Its core proposition has always been transparent pricing and the mid-market exchange rate. Revolut started as a travel card and has expanded into a full-featured financial platform with investing, crypto, insurance, and savings alongside its international money features. This comparison is part of the Best UK Banks and Reviews hub, which covers all the main bank and fintech reviews. Both companies are significant players within the global payments industry — Visuwire’s payments sector overview covers the broader market dynamics, revenue breakdown, and major players.

At a glance

Feature Wise Revolut
Best for International transfers All-round money management
Exchange rate Mid-market (always) Mid-market (limits and markups apply)
Transfer fee ~0.3–1% (transparent) Free within limits; small fee above
Monthly subscription None — pay per use Free, Plus (~£3), Premium (~£8), Metal (~£15)
UK banking licence No (EMI) Yes (since 2024)
FSCS protection No Yes — on banking products
Multi-currency support 50+ currencies 30+ currencies
Best use case Moving money internationally Travel, daily use, investing

Exchange rates and fees in depth

Both Wise and Revolut use the mid-market rate — the rate you see on Google — as their baseline. The difference is in how they add costs on top.

Wise charges a transparent percentage fee (typically 0.3–1%) on every conversion. The rate you see is the rate you get, with the fee shown separately before you confirm. There are no weekend markups and no hidden margin in the exchange rate itself.

Revolut’s free tier offers fee-free exchanges up to £1,000 per month on weekdays, but applies a 0.5–1% weekend markup when the currency markets are closed. Above the monthly limit, a small conversion fee applies. Paid plans (Plus, Premium, Metal) raise or remove limits and reduce weekend markups.

Fee comparison for a £1,000 transfer to EUR

Scenario Wise Revolut Free Revolut Premium
Exchange rate Mid-market Mid-market Mid-market
Fee ~£4–7 £0 (within monthly limit) £0
Weekend markup None ~£5–10 Reduced
Effective total cost ~£4–7 £0–10 ~£0

For a single transfer under £1,000 on a weekday, Revolut Free is often cheaper. For large transfers, weekend transfers, or amounts above Revolut’s limits, Wise is typically better value. For regular travellers who transfer frequently, a Revolut paid plan often makes the maths work in Revolut’s favour.

When each wins on cost

Situation Better option
Large one-off transfer (£5,000+) Wise — percentage fees scale more favourably
Small transfer under £1,000 on a weekday Revolut Free — often free within limits
Weekend transfer Wise — no markup
Frequent transfers with Revolut Premium Revolut — unlimited at mid-market
Business payments (predictable cost) Wise — transparent and consistent

Feature comparison

Transfers and multi-currency

Feature Wise Revolut
International transfers Core focus Good
Currencies supported 50+ 30+
Hold multiple currencies Yes Yes
Local account details abroad Yes — many countries Yes — fewer countries
Receive foreign currency salary Yes Yes
Recurring transfers Yes Yes
Business version Wise Business Revolut Business

Wise has broader currency coverage and is often the better choice for receiving payments from abroad — for example, UK freelancers with US or European clients. Revolut covers the major currencies well but does not match Wise’s depth on less common corridors.

Card and spending abroad

Feature Wise Revolut
Debit card Yes Yes
Virtual cards Yes Yes
Disposable virtual cards No Yes
Apple Pay / Google Pay Yes Yes
ATM withdrawals Free up to limits Free up to limits (plan-dependent)
Spending abroad Mid-market rate + fee Free within limits

For travel spending, Revolut generally wins on everyday card use — particularly on paid plans where limits are higher and weekend markups are reduced. Wise’s card works well but the per-transaction fee on conversion makes it slightly less convenient for frequent small purchases. For a deeper look at how Revolut handles travel spending, see the Revolut UK Review 2026.

Everyday banking features

Feature Wise Revolut
UK sort code and account number Yes Yes
Direct debits Yes Yes
Standing orders Yes Yes
Salary payments Yes Yes
Budgeting tools Basic Good
Savings vaults No Yes
Round-ups No Yes
Bill splitting No Yes

Revolut is considerably more developed as an everyday banking platform. If you are looking at one of these apps as a supplement to your main bank — or even as a closer replacement — Revolut offers more of the features people associate with a current account. For a full-service digital bank comparison, see Online and Digital Banks UK.

Extra features

Feature Wise Revolut
Stock trading No Yes
Crypto No Yes
Commodities No Yes
Travel insurance No Yes (paid plans)
Cashback No Yes (Metal)
Airport lounge access No Yes (Metal)

This is the most striking gap between the two. Revolut has built out a significant investment and lifestyle platform. Wise has stayed focused on its transfer and multi-currency core. If you want stocks, crypto, or travel insurance in one app, Revolut is the only real option between the two.

Safety and regulation

Wise

Wise is authorised and regulated by the FCA as an Electronic Money Institution. It is not a bank and does not hold a banking licence. Client funds are safeguarded — held separately from Wise’s own money in ring-fenced accounts at major banks — but are not covered by the FSCS deposit guarantee.

Aspect Detail
FCA status Authorised EMI
FSCS protection No
Client fund safeguarding Yes — ring-fenced
Listed company Yes (London Stock Exchange)
Operating since 2011

Revolut

Revolut received its UK banking licence in 2024 after a lengthy application process. This is a significant change — it means deposits held in Revolut’s UK bank account are now eligible for FSCS protection up to £85,000. However, some Revolut products are still issued under its older e-money licence. Always check the specific product terms.

Aspect Detail
UK banking licence Yes (granted 2024)
FSCS protection Yes — on banking products, up to £85,000
FCA status Regulated bank and EMI (for legacy products)
Operating since 2015

The practical safety difference has narrowed substantially since Revolut received its banking licence. For amounts within the FSCS limit, Revolut’s banking products now carry the same deposit protection as a traditional bank.

Pricing plans

Wise has no subscription — you pay a transparent fee per transaction. There is no monthly charge.

Revolut offers four tiers:

Plan Monthly cost Key benefits
Standard Free Basic features, £1,000/month exchange limit, weekend markup
Plus ~£3/month Higher limits, more features
Premium ~£8/month Unlimited exchange, travel insurance, no weekend markup
Metal ~£15/month Cashback, lounge access, best perks

Whether a Revolut paid plan is worth it depends on how much you transfer and how often you travel. At £8/month, Premium breaks even against Wise if you are making regular international transfers or spending meaningfully abroad.

Real-world cost examples

Sending £5,000 to the USA

Provider Fee Recipient receives (approx.)
Wise ~£25 ~$6,220
Revolut Free (weekday, within limit) £0 ~$6,245
Revolut Premium £0 ~$6,245
Traditional bank transfer £25–40 + poor rate ~$5,900

For a transfer of this size on a weekday within limits, Revolut Free and Wise are comparable. For amounts above Revolut’s monthly limit, or at weekends, Wise becomes more predictable. For a comparison with other international transfer services, see How to Send Money Abroad Cheaply.

Two-week holiday spending €1,000

Provider Approximate cost Notes
Wise card ~£5–10 Fee on conversion
Revolut Free ~£0–10 Depends on weekend use and limits
Revolut Premium ~£0 Within limits, no weekend markup
UK bank card £30–50 Poor exchange rate plus foreign transaction fee

Receiving a USD salary of £3,000/month equivalent

Provider Approximate monthly cost
Wise ~£15–20 via US account details and conversion
Revolut ~£0–15 depending on plan and conversion timing
Traditional bank international wire £50–100

Pros and cons

Wise

Pros Cons
Transparent, predictable pricing Not FSCS protected
Mid-market rate with no hidden markup Fewer everyday banking features
No subscription required No investing or crypto
Strong coverage of currency corridors Card less generous than Revolut for travel
Wise Business is excellent for freelancers No travel insurance

Revolut

Pros Cons
Feature-rich — investing, crypto, insurance Free tier has limits and weekend markups
FSCS protection on banking products Paid plans add a monthly cost
Disposable virtual cards Customer service quality varies
Good budgeting and savings tools Complex product range can be confusing
Improving banking status and regulation Limits on free tier require monitoring

Which should you choose?

Your situation Recommendation
Primarily sending money abroad Wise
Frequent international traveller Revolut Premium
Want one app for everything — transfers, investing, travel Revolut
Transparency is your priority Wise
Do not want a monthly subscription Wise
Want stocks, crypto, or insurance in one app Revolut
UK freelancer or business with international clients Wise Business

Many experienced users keep both. Wise for larger or less frequent international transfers where predictable fees matter; Revolut for everyday travel spending; a traditional bank for the main current account. This combination covers most international money needs at low cost.

More in this cluster

Sources

  1. Wise — How Wise works
  2. Revolut — UK banking licence
  3. FCA — Financial Services Register
  4. FSCS — What we cover