Fintech
by
Michael Tan,
Etienne Segal
·
Updated April 11 2025
Small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs) represent
of all firms in the US and generated over in banking revenue across deposits, payments, and lending in 2023. Bank accounts play a pivotal role in company operations, from payroll, receivables, credit cards, and taxes to financial reporting and cash flow forecasting. of SMBs undergoing some kind of financial stress are the most likely to use a digital bank as their primary financial institution. Traditional banks have long them — deterred by low average contract values, high churn, and fragmented needs.Digital banking is expected to reach a market size of
by 2032. The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a spike in digital banking usage for both large and small banks. For example, Wells Fargo saw a growth in remote check deposits and a growth in online wire transfers in 2021. Taken together, these trends have created an opportunity to rethink the banking experience with startups in mind. But the experience has fragmented, with legacy interfaces, siloed workflows, and little product innovation. Meanwhile, digital banks have mostly on consumers or gig workers, leaving a clear opportunity to build a banking stack purpose-built for high-growth companies.Mercury is executing against this gap. Since launching in 2019, it has built a banking platform that includes FDIC-insured checking and savings accounts, global wires, debit and credit cards, cash management, and team controls, all through a self-serve platform. Following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank
, Mercury became the banking partner for many founders, with over businesses onboarded. As digital banking becomes the norm and startups demand software-like experiences from their banks, Mercury is well-positioned to become the leading operating system for startup banking — and increasingly, for financial operations more broadly.Mercury was founded by
(CEO), (CTO), and (COO) in San Francisco in 2017. The trio had previously worked together at mobile ad network Heyzap, by Akhund in 2008, where Tagher was a , while Zhang the VP of business development. Heyzap was acquired by Fyber in 2015 for .Source:
Akhund first had the idea for Mercury
after noticing a sharp contrast in how quickly startup tooling was evolving — , , and had dramatically improved, but banking remained stubbornly outdated. Despite seeing the opportunity early, he waited until 2017 to launch the company, someone else would inevitably modernize startup banking.While running Heyzap, the founders had frequently felt
by cash flow and frustrated by the complexity of basic banking and accounting operations. After the company’s exit, Akhund an angel investor and repeatedly saw those same pain points other startup founders — lengthy application processes, hidden fees, in-person branch visits, and poorly designed user interfaces.by the rise of European challenger banks, Akhund began exploring how a technology-first banking experience could better serve startups. He spent three months meeting with around and over to understand the landscape. Eventually, Mercury with Evolve Bank & Trust, Choice Financial Group, and Patriot Bank to provide the underlying infrastructure for its offering.
After raising a
seed round in 2017, Akhund, Tagher, and Zhang the team at just nine people, while working for 18 months to build a complete product. Competing with legacy banking providers meant Mercury couldn’t launch with a semi-functional MVP. The team aimed for what Akhund a “minimum delightful product,” delivering domestic and international wires, multi-user permissions, a clean UI, and support for immigrant founders from day one. Mercury launched its private alpha in , and within the first week, one customer transferred into their account. Public launch followed shortly after, growing month-over-month.Mercury’s core product is a business checking and savings account, which acts as the gateway to its broader financial stack. Once onboarded, customers can access adjacent offerings such as treasury management, financing solutions, and financial operations tools — all integrated into a single platform. In
, Mercury also expanded into personal banking, aiming to serve founders and operators across both their business and individual financial needs.Source:
Mercury’s
is a fully digital, FDIC-insured business checking and savings account designed for startups and SMBs. It offers a clean user interface, rapid onboarding, and automation-friendly infrastructure, as a modern to legacy banks. In April 2023, Mercury announced a with Stripe Atlas that enables startups to set up business banking faster. With the partnership, startups can get a bank account before the IRS issues an Employer Identification Number (EIN).Source:
As of April 2025, Mercury is
to companies based in the US, British Overseas Territories, UAE, Bahamas, Bermuda, Singapore, and Jersey. While Mercury is not a bank itself, it operates in with regulated institutions, primarily Choice Financial Group, which hold the underlying licenses. Mercury’s partners were for their strong financial standing, regulatory compliance, and willingness to support its fast-paced product development.Every Mercury account comes with read-and-write
, which allows customers to build customizable automation. This can be to carry out key banking and accounting activities such as creating dashboards, building custom sweep rules, reconciling transactions, querying account data, and programmatically initiating ACH payments.Source:
helps startups earn yield on idle cash while preserving liquidity and minimizing risk. As of April 2025, the net yield ranges from 4.02% to 4.47%, and the product is available to companies with at least in deposits, offering access to low-risk, high-liquidity portfolios managed by J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley. Funds are held in the customer’s name, and Mercury enables same-day withdrawals and custom auto-transfer rules between operating and investment accounts.
For startups with over
on deposit, Mercury offers a white-glove service through Mercury Treasury Solutions by Morgan Stanley, which provides personalized portfolio management and access to a wider range of short-term securities.A core feature of Mercury Treasury is
, which extends FDIC insurance coverage from the standard to up to $5 million. Vault uses a to distribute funds across multiple partner banks, ensuring that no single account exceeds the FDIC insurance cap. Mercury charges no account opening, transaction, or minimum balance fees for Treasury. Instead, it collects a percentage of monthly Treasury balances, typically from 0.15% to 0.60%.Source:
Mercury provides three financing tools tailored to the needs of startups and SMBs: IO credit cards, venture debt, and working capital loans. These offerings are
to support cash flow, reduce dilution, and unlock runway without compromising financial control.Credit Cards
The
offers a flexible credit line with no interest, no annual fees, and 1.5% cashback on all spending, automatically deposited into the customer’s account. Unlike traditional business cards that rely heavily on credit history, Mercury’s underwriting is on real-time cash balances, allowing newer startups with minimal credit history to qualify with as little as in deposits. Customers can unlimited virtual and physical cards, set merchant locks and spending limits, and sync transactions with accounting software like QuickBooks, Xero, and NetSuite. As of , the IO card is issued by Patriot Bank and includes Mastercard’s Zero Liability and fraud protection.Venture Debt
Mercury’s
solution is designed for VC-backed companies seeking non-dilutive capital to extend their runway. Loans typically range from of the most recent VC round and come with competitive rates, no prepayment penalties, and optional refinancing following future fundraising rounds. The application process is through Mercury’s dashboard and approved founders receive access to a dedicated capital advisor and relationship manager.Working Capital
Focused on ecommerce brands, Mercury’s
loans are structured to help merchants scale inventory, marketing, and operations. Loans with flat-fee pricing, fixed weekly repayment schedules, and no personal guarantees or collateral requirements. Unlike revenue-based financing models, Mercury’s fixed structure for clearer cash flow planning. Eligibility requires in annual sales and at least of operating history, and each borrower is with an e-commerce lending specialist to help with growth planning and future capital needs.Source:
, Mercury expanded beyond core banking to launch a full suite of financial operations tools, including , , , and . These new capabilities bring Mercury into with fintech players like Ramp*, Brex, and Navan, offering startups an integrated back office stack directly within their bank.
Bill Pay
Mercury
is an accounts payable tool that automates every step of paying vendors. Incoming invoices are automatically using AI, deduplicated, and populated into a bill inbox sorted by status and due date. Admins can payments inside Slack or the Mercury app, set multilayered approval rules, and choose from ACH, wire, or check. Bill Pay also vendor management features and fraud controls such as whitelist-only payments and tax document collection. All bill data directly to accounting software.Invoicing
Mercury’s
allows startups to generate branded invoices, track payments, and receive funds via ACH, credit card, Apple Pay, Google Pay, and more. Users can by invoice status, automate reminders, edit invoices post-send, and set up recurring billing. Payments are automatically to the correct invoices and synced to QuickBooks, NetSuite, or Xero. The core invoicing features are , with advanced capabilities like custom branding and recurring invoices available on paid plans, starting at per month.Expense Management
Mercury combines corporate cards and reimbursements into a single employee
. Admins can unlimited virtual and physical cards, set granular spend controls, require receipts, and earn cashback. Employees can also out-of-pocket expenses via receipt scanning and receive reimbursements in a few clicks. Admins can flag out-of-policy expenses, assign user permissions, and integrate the system with HR/payroll tools. Reimbursements for up to active users are free, with available for larger teams.Accounting Automations
Mercury’s
reduces manual work by syncing bills, card transactions, expenses, and payments into popular accounting platforms. Teams can set for categorization, require receipts above certain thresholds, and automate reminders for employees. Finance leads and bookkeepers can transaction coding before data is pushed into QuickBooks, NetSuite, or Xero. Additional features include bank statement sharing, tax document storage, and user-level access controls.Source:
In
, Mercury expanded beyond business banking with the launch of , a premium consumer offering designed for founders and investors who the same product functionality as they experienced in their business accounts.Customers can set up high-yield savings accounts earning up to
APY, automate transfers between accounts, issue multiple debit cards with spending limits, and share access with others using customizable permissions. Personal accounts also benefit from up to in FDIC insurance via Mercury’s partner banks and .Rather than targeting the underbanked or high-net-worth segments
by most neobanks and private banks, Mercury is positioning Personal as a modern operating system for tech-forward individuals. The product is for those who want full control over their finances without relying on in-branch visits or relationship managers.Mercury Personal is priced at
per year and includes unlimited domestic wires, ACH transfers, ATM fee reimbursements, and no minimum balance requirements. It also users to seamlessly switch between their business and personal accounts under a single login.Mercury
digital entrepreneurs — primarily startups, ecommerce companies, and professional services providers. Traditionally, banks have to bank or lend to startups because they were viewed as too risky. Before its collapse, nearly half of all startups in the US were by SVB, as they were unable to access credit cards or loans from other banks.Even though Mercury started out servicing startups, they make up less than
of its customer base as of . Its customer base consists of ecommerce companies, followed by and . In April 2024, Mercury its personal banking service in limited access, planning to roll it out for wider use by the end of 2025. Some of Mercury’s customers Linear, Phantom, ElevenLabs, and Supabase. At the start of 2024, there were over businesses using the bank.Mercury operates at the intersection of two markets: commercial banking and financial operations software. In 2019, Akhund
that over 3 million businesses are created annually in the US, and banking those businesses is a $400 billion industry. In 2023, there were new business applications in the US, and every business needs a banking partner.As of March 2025, customers held over
in deposits at commercial banks in the US, divided equally between retail deposits and commercial deposits. Combined revenues of financial technology companies worldwide are to increase from in 2023 to $1.5 trillion in 2030.Source:
Mercury competes across three fronts: neobanks, broader fintech platforms, and traditional incumbents. Players in each of these segments are positioning themselves as the financial operating systems for startups and SMBs.
Source:
Brex:
is a spend management platform in San Francisco, California in 2017, which launched a as an adjacent offering to its core corporate card product. Brex was valued at in January 2022 and has raised in funding as of April 2023. In the aftermath of SVB’s collapse, Brex, like Mercury, billions of dollars of deposit inflows. In one sampling of former SVB customers, an estimated opened a bank account with Brex in this period of time (this figure for Mercury in the same sample was ~20%). Brex uses JPMorgan and Column Bank as its partner banks, just as Mercury uses Choice Financial Group and Evolve Bank & Trust. As of April 2025, Brex has customers on its platform.Novo:
is a digital banking platform for small business owners, entrepreneurs, and freelancers. It was founded in in Miami, Florida. Novo was valued at as of and has raised in total funding. As part of its offering, Novo provides an app marketplace that lets small businesses customize their banking experience with dozens of native integrations. As of April 2025, Novo had over in lifetime transactions and more than customers.Rho:
is a digital banking service for startups. It was founded in in New York, and has raised in total funding. It offers up to in deposit insurance through sweep networks, which is much more than most startup banking , including Mercury. However, unlike Mercury, it does not have a venture debt offering. Its annualized transaction volume grew from a little less than in December 2020 to a cumulative volume of in November 2021.Ramp*: Founded in
in New York, * is a financial technology company that provides businesses with corporate cards and a financial platform to streamline expense management, bill payments, procurement, travel booking, and treasury services. In , the company conducted a $150 million secondary share sale, bringing its valuation to $13 billion. As of April 2025, Ramp has raised over in funding. Unlike Mercury, which focuses primarily on banking services for startups, Ramp offers a broader of financial tools, positioning itself as a financial operations platform integrating on top of a bank.Navan: Founded in
in Palo Alto, California, (formerly TripActions) is a travel, corporate card, and expense management platform that streamlines corporate travel bookings and automates expense reporting for businesses. As of April 2025, the company has raised in funding and was valued at in October 2022.Rippling: Founded in
in San Francisco, California, is a workforce management platform that HR, IT, and finance operations into a single system, streamlining processes such as payroll, benefits administration, and expense tracking. Rippling has raised from investors and was valued at as of April 2025.Mercury competes with legacy banking giants like
, , , and . This category includes regional banks that have focused on serving startups, such as and .Mercury does not
for account opening, maintenance, or overdrafts. Most core banking services, such as domestic wires, ACH transfers, and issuing multiple cards, are free for users. Mercury revenue across several channels, combining traditional banking economics with modern fintech monetization strategies. Its primary revenue sources include:Interest on Deposits: Mercury shares in the interest earned on customer deposits through revenue-sharing agreements with its partner banks.
Interchange Fees: When customers use Mercury’s debit or IO credit cards, Mercury earns a percentage of the interchange fees charged to merchants by Visa and Mastercard.
Foreign Exchange & Wire Fees: Mercury charges a 1% fee on international wires and foreign currency exchanges.
Product Fees: Mercury earns fees from premium services like Mercury Treasury and Mercury Venture Debt — including origination fees, interest payments, and small equity warrants.
Software Subscriptions: In 2024, Mercury introduced subscription-based
for its financial operations tools, including $35/month for basic features and $350/month for the full suite. Mercury Personal, its consumer banking product, carries a subscription.Source:
Mercury’s partner-based model allows it to
as a financial technology platform rather than a licensed bank. Its services are built atop regulated financial institutions, it to offer full-featured banking without holding a charter. Core business accounts are by Choice Financial Group and Column N.A., a bank by Plaid cofounder William Hockey, which now serve as Mercury’s primary banking partners. Mercury previously worked with Evolve Bank & Trust but began transitioning away in following operational issues. Beyond core banking, Mercury with Patriot Bank to issue its IO credit card, and Apex Clearing and Morgan Stanley to power cash management for its Treasury product.Source:
Most of Mercury’s growth has come through word of mouth — Mercury estimates that
of customer acquisition is organic. Moreover, it maintains strategic partnerships with over venture firms, law firms, accountants, and startup service providers, OnDeck, Kruze Consulting, and Orrick. These partners new business to Mercury via referrals, onboarding support, and co-marketing efforts, helping Mercury position itself as the default financial platform for startups.Mercury has emerged as a leading banking platform for startups, growing from
customers in early 2023 to over by early 2025. In the aftermath of the March 2023 , it was estimated that of SVB customers opened a new account at Mercury. Akhund stated that in just 6 days after the SVB collapse, Mercury had added more than in deposits and thousands of customers. During that stretch, Mercury experienced more signups in days than it normally would have in a whole week. Additionally, Mercury saw a in interest and signups from VC funds that were looking to bank with Mercury after the SVB collapse.In 2023, the company processed
in transactions, up from in 2022, and grew that figure to in 2024. Revenue reached in 2024, with profitability maintained since . The company has also grown its headcount to employees, with plans to surpass 1K employees in 2025.Source:
Mercury’s Net Promoter Score (NPS) is reportedly
, compared to an average of 34 for traditional banks. It remains especially popular among early-stage founders. According to Kruze Consulting, nearly of new startups choose Mercury as of March 2024, having trusted it with more than half of their total cash reserves. Among YC companies, more than used Mercury in March 2023. In 2024, Mercury has been in the Forbes Fintech 50 list.In March 2025, Mercury raised a
Series C round at a $3.5 billion post-money valuation — more than double its valuation from its prior Series B in 2021. Its latest round was led by Sequoia Capital, with participation from existing investors Coatue, CRV, and Andreessen Horowitz, as well as new backers Spark Capital and Marathon. The raise brought Mercury’s total funding to .Following its Series B round in
, Mercury allowed customers to invest via the equity crowdfunding . Mercury raised from 2.5K investors within 90 minutes on Wefunder, and the round reached $23 million in reservations over the next 9 days after the Wefunder launch. Akhund felt it for Mercury customers to become owners of Mercury.Senior
at Mercury have noted the opportunity to add adjacent offerings to the core banking platform. In 2023, Mercury’s VP of Finance Dan Kang has that “there's so much value we can drive regarding workflow automation for accounting and finance teams. We want to give them back time.” In the , Mercury released its suite, introducing Bill Pay, Invoicing, Expense Management and Accounting Automation products. Building offerings focused on workflow automation for accounting and finance processes could create more value for customers, entrench them deeper into the Mercury ecosystem, and drive more revenue. In the that other fintech companies see banking as a potential offering to build and attach to their core non-banking platforms, Mercury can expand from its core banking platform into other fintech services, and perhaps eventually become the single source of truth for all things finance and banking for its customers.In 2024, Mercury
beyond business accounts with the launch of Mercury Personal, a consumer banking product at founders, investors, and operators. Priced at , Mercury Personal brings the same design philosophy and product quality from its business accounts to individual users. This move deepens Mercury’s relationship with its core audience, allowing it to serve the same user across both business and personal contexts. It also Mercury to capture high-income, tech-forward consumers who are by legacy banks and unimpressed by consumer neobanks. Over time, this could open the door to new lines of business such as founder-focused lending, personal investing tools, or business and personal financial services.In
, Mercury announced it was cutting ties with longtime partner Evolve Bank & Trust, citing a string of . Going forward, Mercury will on Choice Financial Group and Column N.A. for new and migrated accounts. While the company has so far avoided becoming a licensed bank, this shift highlights the fragility of relying on partner institutions and raises the question of whether Mercury should pursue its own banking charter.Becoming a bank would give Mercury
over customer experience, compliance, and product velocity. It would also reduce to third-party risk and improve unit economics by eliminating revenue sharing with partner banks. The is a higher regulatory burden and slower iteration cycles. But as Mercury scales toward becoming a financial system of record for startups and founders, owning its own banking infrastructure could become a strategic necessity.As a result of the SVB collapse, smaller banks are losing deposits as depositors flee to safety in larger, systemically important banks that could be more resilient to any bank run risks. The
gained $120 billion in deposits in the days after SVB collapsed. All the US banks below that level lost $108 billion over the same period. It was the largest weekly decline for the smaller banks’ deposits. Though Mercury has benefited from this, it still is a much smaller, much younger banking provider (and so are the two banks that Mercury partners with) than the legacy incumbents, and it remains to be seen whether Mercury can result in the long-term buck the trend of smaller banks losing trust. The balance sheets of Mercury’s partner banks Column N.A. and Choice Financial Group are weaker than the balance sheets of giants like JP Morgan, which famously has a “ .” In late 2022, multiple VC funds including Sequoia Capital and Craft Ventures have startups to move funds away from Evolve-backed platforms, which resulted in about $200 million of deposits moving off of Mercury.Mercury may face the risk of their customers graduating to more established banks like JP Morgan or Bank of America as they mature and grow in size. As startups grow and become more established, they may need more specialized services, such as international banking or investment management, that Mercury may not be as well-equipped to provide as larger, older banks are. Established banks like JP Morgan have larger networks, resources, and additional services that may be more appealing to startups as they grow into larger companies with more needs. This need for additional resources and services beyond what Mercury offers, but within the realm of what a big bank like JP Morgan can offer, has been cited by customers as a feature request — one Mercury customer
that while they see Mercury as a 10 out of 10 product experience, it lacks some of the “ancillary personal services” like founder lending. It also lacks a proactive, high-touch networking service that can help with fundraising.Moreover, Mercury's customers may be more likely to switch to a larger, more established bank due to concerns about the stability of a startup bank, especially in light of the SVB crisis. Startups may prefer to move to larger banks that have a more proven track record of stability and reliability as soon as these startups grow to the size such that those large banks are ready and willing to bank them. This risk stems from one of Mercury’s value propositions — that it makes it easy for startups to get bank accounts when they are small and thus cannot easily obtain bank accounts at established banking institutions. Mercury's growth prospects may be limited if many of its customers do end up graduating to larger banks.
Mercury was founded to solve a long-standing gap in business banking: traditional banks have failed to meet the needs of startups. By combining a tech-forward interface with streamlined onboarding and thoughtful features like treasury management, startup financing solutions, and financial automation, Mercury has scaled to serve over 200K businesses in 2024. The collapse of SVB accelerated its rise, positioning Mercury as a new default for early-stage companies. Today, Mercury is extending its ambitions beyond startups, expanding into personal banking. The challenge ahead lies in defending against incumbents and all-in-one fintech platforms, retaining customers as they scale, and building trust at a time when smaller financial institutions face growing scrutiny.
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