Nik Storonsky: Revolutâs IPO is Still âTwo Years Awayâ

Revolut CEO Nik Storonsky says the digital bankâs IPO is still two years away, with plans to take the company public sometime in 2028.
In an interview with Bloomberg, Nik said the company was still âtwo years awayâ from an official IPO.
âWeâre a bank, and for a bank, itâs super important to have trust. Public companies are trusted more compared to private companies,â he added.
According to Nik, Revolut will launch more secondary share sales before announcing an IPO, as it generally does transactions every one to two years.
In the same interview, he added that secondary deals generate liquidity for early investors and employees, allow Revolut to stay private for longer and have generally raised its valuation.
Further plans for international expansion
Revolut serves more than 70 million customers across 100 countries and holds banking licences in multiple jurisdictions, including Lithuania, the UK, and Mexico, where it launched full banking operations in January 2026.
The companyâs most recent secondary share offering in November 2025 values the company at US$75bn, making it one of the most valuable private technology companies with one of the largest customer bases in the world.
As Revolutâs valuation has grown, the company has accelerated its international expansion plans.
In March 2026, Revolut filed a national bank charter application with the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
In a company statement on his appointment as CEO in March, Nik said that a US license is important for Revolutâs production ambitions: âFiling for a national bank charter is a major milestone toward our vision of building the worldâs first truly global banking platform.
âThis charter will give us the direct control needed to innovate faster and deliver the Revolut experience to millions more Americans as we move toward our goal of 100 million customers.â
A global leader in the finance market
Revolutâs financial trajectory makes the two-year IPO window plausible.
The company generated US$4bn in revenue and US$1.4bn in pre-tax profit in 2024, up 72% and 149% respectively year-on-year.
For 2026, management has projected US$9bn in revenue and US$3.5bn in net profit, figures that would make it one of the most profitable fintech companies in the world.
Revolutâs valuation trajectory, however, affects its IPO strategy
A November 2025 secondary share sale, led by Coatue, Greenoaks, Dragoneer and Fidelity valued the company at US$75bn.
On 25 February, Bloomberg reported that Revolut is weighing another secondary share sale in the second half of 2026, potentially pushing the companyâs value above US$100bn.
Investors and bankers have been watching Revolutâs funding efforts, with speculation that the firm is aiming for an eventual IPO valuation of at least US$150bn, a figure that would make the digital bank more valuable than Barclays, Deutsche Bank, and SociĂ©tĂ© GĂ©nĂ©rale combined.
Nik, who currently holds approximately 29% of the company, also holds an incentive package, modelled on Elon Muskâs Tesla deal, which would give him additional share grants if the company reached US$200bn in valuation.



