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

Online and Digital Banks UK — Monzo, Starling, Revolut and Chase Compared

Compare the best UK digital banks in 2026 — Monzo, Starling, Chase, and Revolut. Features, fees, FSCS protection, savings rates, and which is best for your needs.

Part of our Best UK Banks 2026/27 — Bank Reviews and Comparison Guide.

Digital banks have transformed UK banking over the last decade. Where traditional banks charged for overseas spending, took days to update balances, and offered paper statements, digital challengers offer instant notifications, spending pots, fee-free foreign use, and app experiences that high-street banks have spent years trying to match.

In 2026, the four major digital banks for UK consumers are Monzo, Starling, Chase, and Revolut. Each has a distinct proposition. This guide explains what separates them, where each falls short, and which is right for you. The fintech companies behind these banks have become major businesses globally — Visuwire’s fintech sector analysis covers the industry’s revenue dynamics and leading companies.

At a Glance

BankFSCS ProtectedForeign FeesBest Savings RateCashbackJoint Account
Starling✅ £85,000NoneSpaces (competitive)NoYes
Monzo✅ £85,000None (0.5% weekend)4%+ (paid plan)No (free tier)Yes
Chase✅ £85,000NoneLinked saver ~4–5%1% on spendingNo
Revolut✅ £85,000None (limits on free)Vaults (competitive)Paid plansNo

Starling Bank

Starling is the most consistently recommended digital bank for use as a main current account. It’s fully licensed, carries FSCS protection, and has won Which? Recommended Provider status multiple times.

FeatureDetail
Monthly fee£0
Foreign spendingFree — Mastercard rate, no markup
ATM withdrawals abroadFree
Overdraft15–35% EAR — among the lowest of any digital bank
Savings (Spaces)Competitive AER — verify current rate
Joint accountsYes
Business accountYes — highly rated for sole traders and SMEs
Cash depositsPost Office branches
ChequesYes — via app

Pros: True all-rounder, competitive overdraft, excellent business banking, completely free foreign use, no spending limits abroad.

Cons: No cashback on spending, savings rates not always top of market, no salary sorting tools (unlike Monzo).

Best for: Main account users, the self-employed, frequent travellers, joint account holders.

Monzo

Monzo has the largest user base of any UK digital bank and the most feature-rich free account. Its budgeting tools — salary sorter, spending categories, savings pots, and bill tracking — remain the benchmark.

FeatureDetail
Monthly fee£0 (free) / £5 (Plus) / £15 (Premium)
Foreign spendingFree weekdays (Mastercard rate); 0.5% weekend markup
ATM withdrawals abroad£200/month free, then 3%
Overdraft39.9% EAR — expensive
Savings (Pots)4%+ on paid plans; lower on free
Joint accountsYes
Business accountYes
Cash depositsPayPoint locations
ChequesYes — via app

Pros: Best budgeting features in UK banking, instant spending notifications, bill splitting, salary sorter, strong community and in-app support.

Cons: Overdraft rate is high, weekend currency markup, best savings rates locked behind paid plans, ATM limit on free tier.

Best for: People who actively budget, households tracking shared bills, anyone who wants the most feature-complete free account.

Chase UK

Chase entered the UK market in 2021 backed by JPMorgan. Its proposition is simple: 1% cashback on card spending, competitive savings, zero fees anywhere. It has grown rapidly without needing a complex app.

FeatureDetail
Monthly fee£0
Foreign spendingFree — Mastercard rate, no markup
ATM withdrawals abroadFree, no limits
OverdraftNot offered
Savings (linked saver)~4–5% AER — verify current rate
Cashback1% on debit card spending (uncapped in year 1, then select categories)
Joint accountsNo
Business accountNo

Pros: Genuinely competitive 1% cashback, no fees anywhere including abroad, strong savings rate, simple and clean app.

Cons: No overdraft, no joint account, fewer features than Monzo or Starling, cashback terms tighten after year 1.

Best for: Cashback earners, people who want a simple fee-free account, savers who want everything in one place.

Revolut

Revolut is the largest fintech in Europe by valuation. It received its UK banking licence in 2024, bringing FSCS protection to UK customers for the first time. It remains best known for multi-currency and international features.

For a direct comparison of Revolut against Wise for international transfers, see our Wise vs Revolut guide.

FeatureDetail
Monthly fee£0 (Standard) / £7.99 (Plus) / £13.99 (Premium) / £45 (Metal)
Foreign spendingFree on Standard (monthly limits apply); unlimited on paid plans
ATM withdrawals abroadLimited on free plan; higher limits on paid
OverdraftNot offered
Savings (Vaults)Competitive rates — vary by plan
Multi-currency30+ currencies held at interbank rate
Stock and crypto tradingYes — limited on free plan
Joint accountsNo
Business accountYes

Pros: Best multi-currency experience in UK banking, stock and crypto trading, strong paid plan benefits, widespread international acceptance.

Cons: Free plan has meaningful limits, customer service historically inconsistent, not ideal as a sole main account, complex tiered pricing.

Best for: Frequent international travellers, people who hold or exchange multiple currencies, those who want trading features alongside banking.

Feature-by-Feature Comparison

Budgeting Tools

FeatureStarlingMonzoChaseRevolut
Spending categories
Savings pots/spaces
Salary sorting
Round-ups
Bill tracking
Spending insights

Practical Features

FeatureStarlingMonzoChaseRevolut
Apple Pay / Google Pay
Instant notifications
In-app card freeze
Virtual cards✅ (paid)
Joint accounts
Business accounts
Cash depositsPost OfficePayPointLimited
Cheques

Which Digital Bank Should You Choose?

Your PriorityBest Choice
All-round main accountStarling
Budgeting and spending potsMonzo
Cashback on everyday spendingChase
Travel and multi-currencyRevolut
Joint accountStarling or Monzo
Business bankingStarling
Self-employedStarling
Cheapest overdraftStarling (15–35% EAR)
Investment/trading alongside bankingRevolut

For a detailed head-to-head on the three most popular choices, see our Monzo vs Starling vs Revolut comparison.

Using Multiple Digital Banks

Many people combine accounts to get the best of each:

SetupWhy It Works
Starling (main) + Chase (spending)Branch-free main account with 1% cashback on all card payments
Monzo (budgeting) + Revolut (travel)Salary sorter and pots at home; multi-currency when abroad
Traditional bank + any digital bankBranch access when needed, better app for daily use

Holding multiple current accounts doesn’t affect your credit score unless you’re applying for credit products at each bank. Opening additional current accounts is fine.

Digital Banks vs High-Street Banks

Digital banks win on: app experience, foreign fees, budgeting tools, customer service response times, and speed of account opening.

High-street banks (Barclays, HSBC, Nationwide, Lloyds) win on: branch access, mortgage products, business lending, packaged accounts, and familiarity for those who need in-person support.

For most working adults under 50 with straightforward finances, a digital bank makes a better primary account. For mortgages, complex lending, or regular cash handling, a traditional bank alongside is sensible.

Security Tips for Digital Banks

  • Enable biometric login (Face ID or fingerprint) — never use a PIN alone
  • Turn on instant notifications — spot unauthorised transactions immediately
  • Use virtual cards for online shopping to protect your main card details
  • Set card spending limits within the app if you want extra controls
  • Freeze your card the moment you notice it’s missing — all four banks support instant in-app freezing

Sources

  1. FCA — UK banking licences register
  2. FSCS — Who we protect
  3. Pay.UK — Current Account Switch Service
  4. Which? — Best digital banks 2026
  5. MoneyHelper — Choosing a bank account