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Rakuten Bank review / Is Rakuten Bank safe? · Updated 11 March 2026

Is Rakuten Bank safe?
Yes — full Japanese Banking Act charter, direct DICJ.

Rakuten Bank, Ltd. is a chartered Japanese internet-only bank licensed under the Banking Act — one of six FSA Banking Act-licensed net banks operating at retail scale (Rakuten Bank, Sony Bank, au Jibun Bank, SBI Sumishin Net Bank, PayPay Bank, Daiwa Next Bank). Supervised by the FSA, statutory member of DICJ, with eligible deposits protected up to JPY 10,000,000 per depositor per institution plus the full-coverage settlement-account carve-out. Listed on TSE Prime under code TYO: 5838 since April 2023.

Licence
Banking Act
FSA-authorised; FSA-supervised; full chartered bank
Deposit protection
JPY 10M
DICJ · per depositor · per institution
Customers (Japan)
~14M+
Largest Japanese internet-only bank by account count
Operating since
2001
Chartered as eBank 2001; Rakuten-acquired 2009; TSE Prime Apr 2023
Proteção de depósitos APAC-SG
Sistema
SDIC
Tecto
SGD 100,000
Regulador
Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)

A Singapore Deposit Insurance Corporation (SDIC) cobre até SGD 100 000 por depositante por membro do Scheme. A adesão à SDIC aplica-se apenas a bancos completos e sociedades financeiras autorizadas ao abrigo do Banking Act / Finance Companies Act.

Importante. Importante: os titulares de uma Stored Value Facility (SVF) NÃO estão protegidos pelo SDIC. Os fundos dos clientes de SVF são normalmente mantidos numa conta fiduciária num banco custodiante (p. ex., Citibank, DBS) e estão protegidos apenas pelo acordo de segregação, e não por seguro de depósitos. Verifique o tipo de licença junto da MAS antes de tratar uma conta como segurada.

Fonte primária: https://www.sdic.org.sg/

Region fallback: APAC-JP is not yet a first-class region in this site's protection-region type. The block above renders APAC-SG (Singapore SDIC) as the closest operationally similar scheme; substitute DICJ JPY 10,000,000 per depositor per institution as the actual Japanese cover. The prose below uses the DICJ statute directly.

A full chartered Japanese bank — Banking Act licence since 2001

Rakuten Bank is not a fintech sitting on top of a sponsor bank, and it is not an e-money issuer or a Funds Transfer Service Provider. Rakuten Bank, Ltd. (楽天銀行) holds a full Japanese banking licence under the Banking Act (銀行法), the same statutory framework that licenses MUFG Bank, SMBC, Mizuho, Resona, JP Bank, and every other Japanese chartered commercial bank. The licence has been continuous since the original eBank charter in 2001 — one of the original Japanese net-bank cohort alongside Japan Net Bank (now PayPay Bank, chartered October 2000) and Sony Bank (chartered June 2001). Rakuten Group, Inc. acquired eBank in 2009 and rebranded it Rakuten Bank; the acquisition transferred ownership but did not interrupt the licence. The Financial Services Agency (FSA) handles both licensing and ongoing prudential supervision, and Rakuten Bank files capital ratios, liquidity coverage, and the standard supervisory return on the same cadence as any Japanese commercial bank in its size class. The depositor-of-record relationship runs directly to Rakuten Bank, Ltd.; there is no intervening payment-institution wrapper, no sponsor-bank arrangement, and no fintech-on-top-of-a-bank layer between the customer and the chartered entity.

DICJ cover — JPY 10M direct, plus settlement-account carve-out

As an FSA-licensed bank, Rakuten Bank is a statutory member of the Deposit Insurance Corporation of Japan (DICJ) and eligible deposits are protected up to JPY 10,000,000 per depositor per institution plus accrued interest under the Deposit Insurance Act. The cover is paid out by DICJ in the event of an FSA-determined member-bank failure. JPY 10 million is approximately USD 65,000 at recent exchange rates — between the EU DGSD harmonised €100,000 and the FSCS £85,000 by USD-equivalent purchasing power, well above the Korean KDIC ceiling (KRW 50,000,000, ~USD 35,000) and the Philippine PDIC ceiling (PHP 500,000, ~USD 8,800), and one of the highest absolute deposit-insurance ceilings in the world by purchasing-power equivalent for the local cost of living. This is a chartered-bank direct cover — the legal claim runs from the depositor to DICJ against Rakuten Bank, Ltd. as the failed institution. It is not a pass-through arrangement of the kind US partner-bank fintechs rely on.

The Japan-specific feature worth knowing is the settlement-account carve-out (決済用預金 — kessai-yō yokin): non-interest-bearing settlement deposits that are payable on demand and used for transactional flow are fully covered by DICJ regardless of balance — the JPY 10M ceiling does not apply. The carve-out was added in the 2002 deposit-insurance reform that ended unlimited blanket coverage and re-aligned Japan with the international post-1990s deposit-insurance consensus; the policy logic was that retail and small-business payment flows shouldn't be disrupted by a bank failure even when interest-bearing balances above the cap are at risk. Operationally this means a Japanese depositor can hold an arbitrary balance in a Rakuten Bank settlement account (no interest, transactional only) with full DICJ coverage on top of the JPY 10M cover on interest-bearing deposits — a protection envelope no other major OECD deposit-insurance scheme matches in this exact form. What DICJ covers: JPY-denominated current accounts (普通預金), term deposits (定期預金), savings sub-accounts, and the settlement-account carve-out. What DICJ does not cover: foreign-currency deposits (covered separately under different rules; verify the dic.go.jp position before relying on cover for foreign-currency balances), Rakuten Securities investment products (those are securities-class custody under FSA capital-markets rules, not deposit insurance), and Rakuten Pay balances (a different licence class entirely — see below).

Rakuten Bank is not Rakuten Pay — different licence class

This is the structural distinction users misread most often. Rakuten Bank and Rakuten Pay are NOT the same thing. Both are members of the broader Rakuten Group, Inc. (TYO: 4755) ecosystem, but they hold completely different licences and operate under completely different parts of Japan's financial-services rulebook. Rakuten Bank, Ltd. is an FSA-authorised, FSA-supervised bank under the Banking Act — DICJ-covered. Rakuten Pay (operated by Rakuten Edy / Rakuten Payment) is a Funds Transfer Service Provider (FTSP) under Japan's Payment Services Act — primarily QR-code payments, P2P transfers, billing, and merchant settlement. Balances held inside Rakuten Pay are NOT DICJ-covered deposits — they are payment-account balances under a different statutory regime, with safeguarding rules that differ materially from a chartered deposit. If you care about DICJ protection, you must hold the balance inside a Rakuten Bank deposit product, not inside the Rakuten Pay wallet, even though both surfaces sit inside the broader Rakuten ecosystem and the brand presentation can read as similar at a glance. The same structural pattern exists in Korea (Kakao Bank ≠ Kakao Pay) and effectively in the US (FDIC-insured chartered banks vs payment institutions and partner-bank fintech wrappers). Rakuten Wallet — the separate Rakuten group entity — is a registered Crypto-Asset Exchange Service Provider, also not a bank and also outside DICJ.

Public-company governance — TYO: 5838

Rakuten Bank, Ltd. listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange Prime market under code TYO: 5838 on 21 April 2023 — at the time the largest Japanese IPO in five years. That means it submits quarterly disclosures via the EDINET system operated by the FSA at edinet-fsa.go.jp, audited annual financials, and analyst-facing earnings calls. Capital adequacy ratios, non-performing-loan ratios, and liquidity coverage are all observable in the public filings on a quarterly cadence; tick-by-tick price discovery on TSE Prime adds an additional market signal. The parent Rakuten Group, Inc. trades separately on TSE Prime under code TYO: 4755. SBI Sumishin Net Bank (TYO: 7163, listed 29 March 2023 — three weeks before Rakuten Bank) is the only other TSE-listed pure-play Japanese net bank; Sony Bank, au Jibun Bank, PayPay Bank, and Daiwa Next Bank remain wholly-owned subsidiaries of larger groups with no separate listing. For a depositor, listed-company status is a transparency signal independent of the DICJ backstop — the financial picture of the institution is observable rather than just inferred from regulator disclosures.

What happens if Rakuten Bank fails

In the event of a Rakuten Bank, Ltd. failure, the DICJ claim path is the standard Japanese depositor-protection mechanic. The FSA initiates resolution; DICJ pays out eligible depositors up to JPY 10,000,000 per depositor per institution plus accrued interest under the Deposit Insurance Act, with non-interest-bearing settlement-account balances fully covered without the cap. DICJ's published payout window after a Japanese member-bank failure runs to about a week for the insured portion under the standard procedure — significantly faster than most legacy compensation schemes elsewhere in the OECD. Foreign-currency deposit balances and Rakuten Securities holdings inside the linked broker do not route through the DICJ JPY 10M cover — those follow separate paths under FSA capital-markets and foreign-currency-deposit rules. Any balance held inside Rakuten Pay (the separate FTSP entity) is outside DICJ entirely and routes through the safeguarding rules applicable to payment institutions under the Payment Services Act.

Verdict

Rakuten Bank is among the structurally cleanest APAC neobanks on the regulatory mechanics that matter to a depositor: a chartered Japanese bank under the Banking Act with continuous licence since 2001, supervised by the FSA on the same cadence as any Japanese commercial bank, with statutory DICJ cover up to JPY 10,000,000 per depositor per institution, the full-coverage settlement-account carve-out for transactional flow above the cap, and TSE Prime-listed quarterly transparency since April 2023. The structural caveats are bounded and worth knowing — the JPY 10M ceiling is the binding limit on interest-bearing JPY deposits (with the settlement-account carve-out as the high-balance escape valve for transactional flow), foreign-currency deposits sit under different rules, Rakuten Securities holdings are securities-class not deposit-class, and Rakuten Pay is a separate FTSP licence with no DICJ backstop on its balances. For JPY-denominated interest-bearing deposit balances at or below JPY 10M held inside Rakuten Bank, Ltd. — and for arbitrarily large balances held in the settlement-account product — the protection is among the strongest in the OECD by absolute coverage envelope.

Aviso de risco Divulgação MAS Notice 626

Esclareça o tipo de produto antes de confiar em qualquer proteção. Os depósitos bancários estão protegidos pela SDIC até SGD 100 000. O dinheiro eletrónico de uma Stored Value Facility (SVF) é detido em fideicomisso num banco custodiante mas NÃO está protegido pela SDIC. Os investimentos através de licenciados Capital Markets Services comportam o seu próprio risco e não equivalem a depósitos. Verifique a licença junto da MAS em mas.gov.sg.