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APAC / South Korea · Updated 11 March 2026

South Korea's neobanks,
by FSC licence class.

The Financial Services Commission has issued exactly three Internet-Only Bank licences under the Internet-Only Banks Act (인터넷전문은행법) of 2018 — K Bank (April 2017), Kakao Bank (July 2017), and Toss Bank (October 2021). All three are full chartered banks supervised by the FSC + FSS and statutory KDIC members at the KRW 50,000,000 ceiling. The Big-Tech wallets that share the Kakao and Toss brand families — Kakao Pay, the standalone Toss app, KakaoPay Securities — are payment-business or brokerage licences, not banks, and wallet balances are NOT KDIC-insured. The licence class drives the protection — read it before the marketing.

3Internet-Only Bank licences (cap)
KRW 50MKDIC ceiling per depositor
~24MKakao Bank customers (largest)
Last verified11 March 2026
01 — The licence taxonomy

Two regulator surfaces,
one KDIC-covered class.

Korean neobanking sits across two regulator surfaces. The Internet-Only Bank Act licence class — three licensees, FSC + FSS supervised, KDIC-insured — is the only chartered-bank path. The Big-Tech / wallet class — Kakao Pay, the Toss super-app — is a payment-business licence framework that the FSC operates alongside the bank framework, not underneath it. Same brand families, different licences. Read the licence on the receiving entity before assuming a balance is protected.

IOB · Internet-Only Bank Act licence
Kakao Bank, K Bank, Toss BankKDIC
FSC + FSS supervisedFull chartered bank
Internet-Only Banks Act (2018)3-licence cap
KRW 50,000,000 coverDPS reform pending
WALLET · Payment-business licence
Kakao Pay, Toss appFSC payment biz
NOT KDICCustody-bank chain
Safeguarded balancesNot deposits
SECURITIES · KakaoPay Securities
CMA balancesBrokerage licence
NOT a depositInvestment product
Different from Kakao BankSame parent, diff licence
Deposit protection APAC-KR
Scheme
KDIC
Ceiling
KRW 50,000,000
Regulator
Financial Services Commission (FSC) / Financial Supervisory Service (FSS)

Korea Deposit Insurance Corporation (KDIC) covers up to KRW 50 million per depositor per institution. Cover applies to FSS-licensed banks. Internet-only banks (Kakao Bank, Toss Bank, K Bank) are licensed as banks and ARE KDIC-protected.

Primary source: https://www.kdic.or.kr/

03 — KDIC: who's covered, who isn't

Read the licence,
not the marketing.

The Korea Deposit Insurance Corporation (KDIC) covers eligible KRW-denominated deposits at FSS-licensed banks up to KRW 50,000,000 per depositor per institution under the Depositor Protection Act. Statutory membership applies to all FSS-licensed commercial banks, including the three Internet-Only Bank licensees: an eligible KRW deposit at Kakao Bank, K Bank, or Toss Bank sits inside the same statutory envelope as a deposit at KB Kookmin, Shinhan, or Hana. The ceiling applies across all balances at the same institution combined — main account, SafeBox / Bonus Box savings sub-accounts at Kakao Bank, Toss Bank Savings, and time-deposit (정기예금) tenors are netted before the cover is calculated.

The KRW 50,000,000 ceiling has been static since 2001. At a USD/KRW rate near 1,400 the cover is roughly USD 35,000 — well below FDIC ($250,000) and below FSCS (£85,000) or DGSD (€100,000). Reform proposals to raise the cap to KRW 100,000,000 have been debated in the National Assembly through 2024–2025; coverage of the DPS reform on kdic.or.kr and reporting in Yonhap, Korea Times, and Reuters track the statutory progress. Verify the current ceiling on kdic.or.kr before relying on it. Depositors holding more than the cover ceiling in KRW-denominated savings should split balances across multiple KDIC-member institutions to layer cover.

Big-Tech wallets are not KDIC-insured. Kakao Pay (Kakao Corp subsidiary) and the standalone Toss app (Viva Republica) hold payment-business licences from the FSC, not bank licences. Wallet balances are safeguarded at custodian banks under the payment-business framework, but they are not deposits and KDIC cover does not apply. Recovery in a wallet-operator failure depends on the safeguarding arrangement and the custody bank, not on a state-backed compensation scheme. KakaoPay Securities — the brokerage sibling — is a third licence again: CMA balances there are securities, not deposits. The brand family on the home screen is the same; the licence on the receiving entity is categorically different. The FSC has been explicit that Kakao Bank (chartered) and Kakao Pay (payment biz) operate under different prudential frameworks and discourages product cross-pollination between them.

See the individual Kakao Bank review and Toss Bank review for product-level and licence-level detail on the two structured rows.

04 — The Big-Tech entanglement

Why Kakao Bank is not Kakao Pay.

The structural specificity of Korean neobanking is the Kakao messenger ubiquity that drove Kakao Bank's user count to roughly 24 million actives — the distribution moat that no other Korean digital-only bank matches. But the same parent group, Kakao Corp, also operates Kakao Pay (a payment-business product) and KakaoPay Securities (a brokerage). Three different licences, three different consumer-protection envelopes, all sitting on the same KakaoTalk home screen. The FSC has been explicit since the Internet-Only Banks Act came into force that Kakao Bank's chartered status does not extend to its sister entities — the bank licence covers the bank, not the brand. Money moving from a Kakao Pay wallet balance into a Kakao Bank deposit account crosses a regulator boundary inside the same UI: on one side, a safeguarded payment-business balance with no deposit insurance; on the other, a KDIC-covered deposit at a chartered bank.

The Toss group runs the same architecture in reverse: the Toss super-app, operated by Viva Republica, is the consumer-facing payment-business product (~25M users); Toss Bank is the chartered Internet-Only Bank subsidiary launched October 2021; Toss Securities is the brokerage sibling. Funds move freely between the wallet and Toss Bank inside the same UI, but KDIC cover applies only on the Toss Bank side of the line. The practical pattern for a Korean retail user is the same in both ecosystems: keep transactional balances on the wallet side for QR and merchant flow, sweep savings into the chartered-bank product (Kakao Bank, Toss Bank) for KDIC-covered protection, and hold investing positions through the brokerage entity with eyes open about the licence boundary. Splitting balances by use case — and by licence class — is how the Korean Big-Tech entanglement is managed at retail scale.

05 — Methodology

How this ranking is built.

Each candidate is scored on licence class (Internet-Only Bank Act licence vs payment-business vs brokerage), KDIC membership status, published headline KRW savings APY, parent backing, and product surface (chartered KRW current + savings + lending vs wallet-plus-investing vs messenger-distribution-led). 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 KDIC-membership statements were verified against the FSC licensee register at fsc.go.kr, FSS supervisory disclosures at fss.or.kr, KDIC member listings at kdic.or.kr, the DART corporate filings system at dart.fss.or.kr, each operator's public deposit-product page, and reporting from Reuters, Korea Times, and Yonhap on the dates noted in data_as_of. Where Korean statutory changes shift the underlying numbers — the DPS reform raising the KDIC ceiling, an FSC enforcement action, an Internet-Only Bank licence renewal — the relevant prose calls it out and points readers at the FSC / FSS / KDIC primary sources for current status. We do not reproduce FSS-confidential supervisory ratings.

06 — Verdict

For KDIC-covered KRW, only the three Internet-Only Banks count.

For KRW-denominated savings where statutory cover is load-bearing, only the three Internet-Only Bank licensees — Kakao Bank, K Bank, and Toss Bank — sit inside the KDIC envelope at the KRW 50,000,000 ceiling. Kakao Bank is the structural default for retail users already inside KakaoTalk: the largest customer base, the most-developed consumer-investing surface (Mini Stock fractional shares in KRW or USD), and the only Internet-Only Bank publicly listed on KOSPI. Toss Bank is the natural pick for users already inside the Toss super-app, with a competitive 3.5% headline savings rate and the mobile-app-native UX. K Bank is the third licence and the original first-mover (April 2017), competing on time-deposit tenors and KT-channel distribution. Kakao Pay and the standalone Toss app are essential for daily QR and merchant flow but carry no deposit cover — read the licence on the receiving entity inside the app before assuming a balance is protected. The rational pattern for a Korean resident is: chartered Internet-Only Bank (Kakao, Toss, or K) for KDIC-covered KRW savings up to the ceiling, the wallet sibling for daily transactional flow, and balance-splitting across two of the three licensees once the per-bank cover is exhausted — KDIC cover does not aggregate across institutions sharing a parent group.