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APAC / Australia · Updated 11 March 2026

Australia's neobanks,
by APRA licence class.

Australian neobanking sits across three APRA-regulated bank classes plus an ASIC-regulated payment-service surface. Most surviving brands are digital front-ends inside established APRA-supervised authorised deposit-taking institutions (Up inside Bendigo and Adelaide Bank) or specialist ADIs holding their own charter (Judo for SME, Macquarie for retail). The 2018-2020 challenger wave — 86 400, Volt, Xinja — has been almost entirely wound down or absorbed. The Restricted ADI (RADI) "training wheels" framework is dormant. Revolut Australia operates under ASIC AFSL 517589 + an Australian Credit Licence — payment service, NOT bank, NOT FCS-covered. The licence class drives the protection — read it before the marketing.

3FCS-covered ADI rows
AUD 250KFCS ceiling per ADI per holder
3APRA bank classes (ADI + RADI dormant + AFSL on ASIC)
Last verified11 March 2026
01 — The licence taxonomy

Three APRA-regulated bank classes,
plus ASIC-regulated payments.

The Australian framework reads cleanly once you separate the prudential regulator (APRA, which licenses banks) from the conduct regulator (ASIC, which licenses financial-services providers and credit). The full-bank class is the ADI — authorised deposit-taking institution — and only ADIs are inside the Financial Claims Scheme. The Restricted ADI (RADI) class APRA introduced in 2018 to onboard challengers like Volt and Xinja is dormant: no live RADIs since 2021, and the surviving challenger licensees graduated to full ADI status (Judo) or wound down (Volt, Xinja). Everything else — the multi-currency wallets, the AFSL-licensed payment apps — sits under ASIC, not APRA, and is not deposit insured.

ADI · APRA Authorised Deposit-taking Institution
Up (via Bendigo & Adelaide)FCS
Judo Bank, Macquarie BankFCS
AUD 250,000 per ADI per holderPer ADI, not per brand
Banking Act 1959APRA-supervised
RADI · Restricted ADI (dormant)
No active RADI licenseesDormant since 2021
Volt, Xinja used classBoth surrendered
"Training wheels" frameworkPre-graduation to full ADI
AFSL · ASIC Australian Financial Services Licence
Revolut Australia, Wise (AU)ASIC, not APRA
NOT FCSSegregated trust at custodian
Payment service, not a bankWallet-class balances
Deposit protection APAC-AU
Scheme
FCS
Ceiling
AUD 250,000
Regulator
APRA / ASIC

Financial Claims Scheme (FCS) covers up to AUD 250,000 per account-holder per Authorised Deposit-taking Institution (ADI). Cover applies only to APRA-licensed ADIs. Non-ADI fintechs (most Australian neobanks operating without a banking licence) are NOT FCS-protected.

Primary source: https://www.fcs.gov.au/

03 — FCS: who's covered, who isn't

Read the licence,
not the marketing.

The Financial Claims Scheme (FCS) covers eligible Australian-dollar deposits at APRA-supervised authorised deposit-taking institutions up to AUD 250,000 per account holder per ADI. Membership is statutory for every APRA-licensed ADI: Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Ltd. (parent of Up), Judo Bank Ltd., Macquarie Bank Ltd., and the Big Four are all FCS members, and an eligible AUD deposit at any of them sits inside the same statutory envelope. The ceiling applies across all eligible accounts at the same ADI combined — transaction account, savings, term deposits, joint-account share — netted before the AUD 250,000 cover is calculated. The FCS is funded by industry levies post-failure, not by an ex-ante premium, and pays out from the Australian government in the event of an ADI failure (see fcs.gov.au and apra.gov.au).

The cover is per ADI, not per brand. Up Bank is operated by Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Ltd., the APRA-licensed ADI; Up itself does not hold a separate banking licence. That has a structural consequence FCS-eligible depositors should understand: a balance in an Up account and a balance in a Bendigo or Adelaide Bank account share the same AUD 250,000 FCS ceiling at that ADI. They are the same legal entity for deposit-protection purposes. If you want a second AUD 250,000 of FCS cover, you need a deposit at a different ADI — Judo Bank, Macquarie Bank, ING Australia, or another APRA licensee — not a different brand inside the same parent. Bendigo and Adelaide Bank's CET1 capital ratio sat at 11.37% at H1 FY26 (above the 10% board target; see bendigoadelaide.com.au/investorcentre).

AFSL payment services are NOT FCS-covered. Revolut Australia operates under ASIC AFSL 517589 + an Australian Credit Licence — not under the Banking Act 1959. Customer funds are safeguarded in segregated trust accounts at custodian banks per ASIC requirements. Segregation protects funds from the failure of the payment service itself, but it is not deposit insurance. Recovery in a Revolut Australia failure depends on the segregation arrangement and the custody bank, not on the FCS. Wise Australia operates under similar ASIC licences. The brand on the app is the same family of products consumers use every day — the licence on the receiving entity is categorically different from an ADI's. Treat the AUD wallet balance as a payment instrument, not a deposit.

See the individual Up Bank review, FCS / Australia glossary entry, and Best APAC neobanks hub for product-level and licence-level detail. APRA publishes the live ADI register at apra.gov.au; ASIC publishes the AFSL register at asic.gov.au.

04 — The 2018-2020 challenger wave, and what came after

Australia's neobank scene consolidated heavily after 2021.

The 2018-2020 wave produced four headline retail challenger licensees and almost none survived in their original form. 86 400 launched in 2019 under a full APRA ADI charter, was acquired by National Australia Bank in 2021, and was folded into NAB's ubank brand — a strategic absorption into an incumbent, not a wind-down (Reuters; Australian Financial Review). Xinja Bank surrendered its APRA ADI licence in December 2020 and returned customer deposits, citing the inability to raise the capital its growth path required (Sydney Morning Herald; AFR). Volt Bank surrendered its ADI licence and returned deposits in mid-2022 in the post-2021 funding environment when growth-stage capital priced sharply higher (Reuters; AFR). APRA's Restricted ADI ("RADI") framework — the "training wheels" class Volt and Xinja used to ramp before graduating to full ADI status — has been dormant since 2021, with no active licensees and no public timeline for reopening.

The structural lesson the survivors share is simple: do not try to outrun the capital requirement of an APRA ADI on venture funding. Up sits inside Bendigo and Adelaide Bank's existing ADI charter — the brand layer is venture-paced; the prudential balance sheet is incumbent-paced. Judo Bank took its own APRA ADI in April 2019 with an SME-lending niche that supports a defensible net-interest margin and a customer base willing to pay for relationship lending — listed on the ASX in November 2021. Macquarie Bank is an incumbent that operates a digital-first retail surface (transaction account, savings, home loans, brokerage) under its own established ADI; the AFR has repeatedly characterised it as the de-facto challenger by retail-savings flow because the user experience is closer to Up than to the Big Four. The category that wound down was the standalone retail challenger trying to acquire deposits at scale on a standalone ADI without an established parent — every entrant in that profile (Volt, Xinja) failed; the absorbed entrant (86 400 → ubank) became part of an incumbent. Read this before assuming a new neobank brand has the structural staying power its marketing implies — verify the underlying ADI on apra.gov.au.

05 — Methodology

How this ranking is built.

Each candidate is scored on licence class (APRA ADI vs ASIC AFSL/ACL), FCS membership status, parent-bank capital position where applicable, headline savings or term-deposit rate, and product surface (everyday transaction + savings vs SME lending vs incumbent retail vs multi-currency wallet). The ranking is editorial and explicitly excludes affiliate compensation as a ranking input — none of the structured rows on this page carry an affiliate relationship at the time of writing. Licence-status references and FCS membership statements were verified against APRA's published ADI register at apra.gov.au, ASIC's AFSL/ACL register at asic.gov.au, the Financial Claims Scheme primary documentation at fcs.gov.au, each operator's public deposit-product page, and reporting from Reuters, the Australian Financial Review, the Sydney Morning Herald, and Bloomberg on the dates noted in data_as_of. Where APRA prudential standards or ASIC AFSL conditions shift the underlying numbers (capital ratios, segregation rules), the relevant prose calls it out and points readers at the APRA / ASIC primary sources for current status. We do not reproduce APRA-confidential supervisory ratings.

06 — Verdict

For FCS-covered AUD savings, only the ADIs are banks.

For AUD-denominated everyday banking and savings where statutory FCS cover is load-bearing, the APRA ADI rows are the only structurally clean picks in the cohort. Up Bank is the strongest under-35 default — Bendigo and Adelaide Bank's ADI charter puts the deposit inside the FCS at AUD 250,000, the Up Savers Grow rate of 4.85% p.a. when no-access conditions are met is competitive against the Big Four, and no FX markup makes it travel-friendly on the Visa interbank rate. Judo Bank is the structural pick for retail savers willing to lock funds in term deposits — its SME-lending niche supports consistently competitive 3-60 month rates, all FCS-covered. Macquarie Bank is the pick for users who want a broader product surface (home loans, brokerage) on the same FCS envelope. Revolut Australia sits in a categorically different licence class — useful as a multi-currency travel wallet alongside an FCS-covered AUD primary account, not as a substitute for one. Splitting balances by licence class — and across multiple ADIs above the AUD 250,000 ceiling — is how the cohort is rationally used at scale.