Revolut and Wero: The Eurozone Wallet Wars Just Got Interesting
Revolut is adding EPI’s Wero wallet to its app this summer —giving European consumers a sovereign payments option that isn’t wearing Stars and Stripes.
Europe Wants Its Own Payment Muscle. Enter Wero.
Revolut, Europe’s favorite fintech enfant terrible, is shaking up the payments scene again — this time with a very local twist. The neobank has just inked a deal with the European Payments Initiative (EPI) to bring the EPI’s Wero wallet to millions of its users in France, Belgium, and Germany, starting this July.
🚨Revolut is rumoured of joining Wero Payments - Europe's answer to @Visa and @Mastercard. According to sources of Finanz-szene, Revolut is not joining as the shareholder of the "European Payments Initiative" (EPI) - the company behind #Wero, but as a "scheme member". Meaning it… pic.twitter.com/XH9REZYh4S
— Max Karpis (@maxkarpis) May 24, 2025
It's happening.
Wero — Europe’s would-be answer to PayPal, Apple Pay, and other transatlantic giants — enables instant, account-to-account money transfers, fully compliant with European regulations. And Revolut, which already knows a thing or two about scaling fast, is giving the wallet a major new distribution boost.

EPI’s chief strategy officer Ludovic Francesconi framed it simply: “Our mission is to create a real European solution, wallet, innovative solution based on instant payment.” No more fragmented, cross-border mess. No more defaulting to American rails for EU transactions. The geopolitical subtext? Strong.
Why Revolut Is Betting on Wero

For Revolut, this is as much about strategy as sovereignty. “We are really focusing on getting primacy of wallets,” said David Tirado, Revolut’s VP of global business. Translation: Revolut wants its app to be the one-stop shop for every payment its users make — whether that’s paying rent, splitting drinks, or checking out online.
Revolut has already done this successfully in Spain with Bizum and Poland with BLIK. Now, Wero is next — and crucially, a cross-border play.
“We think that the next evolution of our journey to enable our customers to pay where and how they want, is to partner with Wero,” Tirado added. It’s about building stickier user behavior, giving Revolut customers one more reason not to stray to Apple Pay or PayPal.
For now, Wero and Revolut will cover France, Belgium, and Germany — markets that collectively represent over 60% of EU retail payments.
Revolut va proposer Wero dès cet été, pourquoi c'est une bonne nouvelle pour des millions clients ? https://t.co/R6XE69ffum pic.twitter.com/TErTmLU3sa
— Le Journal du Geek (@JournalDuGeek) June 4, 2025
What Wero Actually Does — And What’s Coming Next
Here’s the meat of it:
· Peer-to-peer payments — instant, free-of-charge, using just phone numbers or email addresses.
· Over 40 million users already registered since its 2024 launch.
· Fully integrated inside the Revolut app, starting this summer.
And coming soon:
· E-commerce payments: starting late 2025 in Germany and Belgium, then France in 2026.
· In-store payments, subscriptions, and loyalty services rolling out from 2026.
· Integration with Worldline to allow merchants in Germany (and later elsewhere) to accept Wero online.
· Compatibility with iDEAL in the Netherlands and Payconiq in Luxembourg.
For Revolut, this dovetails perfectly with its €1 billion investment in France and plans to make Paris its Western European HQ. Coincidence? Not really.
The Bigger Game: European Payment Sovereignty
It’s not just a Revolut story. The EPI’s goal is clear: reduce Europe’s reliance on American payments infrastructure — where even now, most EU cross-border digital payments run through US-owned networks.
Wero arrive sur Revolut : voilà ce que ça va changer https://t.co/kxDhMllDHL
— Numerama (@Numerama) June 3, 2025
“In the current geopolitical situation, it’s even more important to be independent in terms of payments, including for cross-border transactions in Europe,” Francesconi said. “When you go from France to Spain, Germany, or Netherlands, you have to use American solutions — unless you use cash.”
Problem is, cash is declining fast. Europe needed a fix — and with the digital euro still years away, EPI is moving now. Wero is step one.
The ambition? Surely, Pan-European coverage. The rollout starts with five markets (France, Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, Luxembourg) but will expand — and Revolut, with its pan-European user base, is a perfect on-ramp.
Bottom line for investors and traders: Revolut’s deepening European play — especially as it moves toward a Western Europe HQ in Paris — signals how embedded fintech players are becoming in the EU’s digital sovereignty agenda. Watch this space.
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