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UK Startups and Innovation
13APR

Paymentology raises $175m for card issuance expansion

3 min read
17:59UTC

Paymentology raised $175m on 12 May, co-led by Apis Partners and Aspirity Partners, on the back of 117% new-sales growth and operations in close to 70 countries; the largest payments infrastructure round in UK fintech in 2026.

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Key takeaway

Paymentology's $175m on 117% new-sales growth shows UK payments infrastructure raises at scale without state co-investment.

Paymentology raised $175m on 12 May 2026, with Apis Partners (its sixteenth payments-sector investment) and Aspirity Partners as co-leads. 1 The company provides a cloud-native card and digital payment issuance platform operating across close to seventy countries. New sales grew 117% year-on-year in FY25; transaction volumes rose 65%. The company has not disclosed absolute revenue figures. Funds expand Paymentology into credit, stablecoins, tokenisation, and AI-driven services beyond its core issuer processing infrastructure.

Paymentology entered the round with no public capital on its cap table. Elliptic's concurrent Series D, which drew the British Business Bank alongside Nasdaq Ventures and Deutsche Bank, closed on the same day with a different capital structure entirely: two UK fintech infrastructure companies, two unrelated verticals, one calendar day, one with state co-investment and one without.

Apis Partners' position as the lead investor on its sixteenth payments sector investment signals specialist conviction rather than a thematic rotation into fintech. For Paymentology, 117% new-sales growth on a payments platform operating in close to seventy countries implies investors are pricing a near-term land-and-expand trajectory, particularly in Asia-Pacific and Latin America, where card issuance infrastructure consolidation is still in progress and existing seventy-country coverage represents meaningful operating credibility.

Venture Capital Trust (VCT) income tax relief was cut from 30% to 20% on 6 April , a change that compresses the seed and angel investor return profile. The shock is concentrated at the earliest funding stages, not at the $175m Series C-and-above level where Paymentology and Elliptic sit. Neither Paymentology nor Elliptic is AI-first despite the dominant 2026 investment narrative; both are classical infrastructure businesses adding AI augmentation layers. The simultaneous closings suggest institutional investors are rotating back toward durable infrastructure plays after the AI-narrative concentration of Q1.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Paymentology runs the technical infrastructure that lets banks and fintech companies issue credit and debit cards to their customers. When a bank in Nigeria, Brazil, or Southeast Asia wants to give its customers a card that works worldwide, it needs a platform like Paymentology's to handle the processing behind every transaction. The company raised $175m in May 2026 from two investment firms specialising in emerging markets payments. It operates in close to 70 countries, and its sales grew 117% in the last financial year. The money will expand the platform into stablecoins and other digital payment forms alongside the core card business. No government money participated in the round.

First Reported In

Update #4 · State capital lands on UK tech in nine days

Fintech Global· 13 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Paymentology raises $175m for card issuance expansion
Paymentology's $175m with no public capital on its cap table shows that UK payments infrastructure founders with strong revenue growth can raise at scale from specialist private investors without any state co-investment, even as the BBB deploys in adjacent fintech sectors.
Different Perspectives
European limited partners (Plural, Aviva Investors)
European limited partners (Plural, Aviva Investors)
Pan-European fund Plural led Orbital's $50m and Aviva Investors co-anchored the BBB's Lansdowne spinout fund (event ID:3505), demonstrating that Continental and UK institutional capital can fill the growth-stage tier independently, though neither has the scale to compete with US growth funds at the $100m+ band that successive ex-DeepMind rounds will eventually reach.
France (DSIT / GENCI / Institut Pasteur)
France (DSIT / GENCI / Institut Pasteur)
France signed the UK-France Strategic Biomedical Alliance on 29 May, contributing €330,000 a year to researcher mobility and linking GENCI national compute to Isambard-AI; the bilateral format suits Paris because it produces scientific access without requiring EU-framework ratification while the UK-EU science relationship remains unsettled.
US growth investors (NVentures, General Catalyst, Crosspoint Capital)
US growth investors (NVentures, General Catalyst, Crosspoint Capital)
NVentures entering Orbital's cap table for the first time and General Catalyst following on in Geordie's Series A signals US growth investors treating London deeptech as a buy-side opportunity the UK market cannot contest. NVentures gains supply-chain visibility into GPU cooling; General Catalyst gains a frontier security category the RSAC prize has already validated for US enterprise.
UK Government (DSIT / British Business Bank)
UK Government (DSIT / British Business Bank)
The BBB cornerstoned Longwall at the seed floor on 27 May while DSIT signed the UK-France bilateral compute deal the same week, deploying state capital at bottom and research layers simultaneously. Neither instrument addresses the Series B middle the April 2026 mandate expansion could reach but has not.
Australian Department of Defence (AUKUS partner, Rowden Technologies)
Australian Department of Defence (AUKUS partner, Rowden Technologies)
Rowden Technologies holds active AUKUS AI for Acoustics contracts with the UK, US and Australian defence establishments. The NWF's £25m investment in Rowden on 13 May places UK sovereign capital directly into a trilateral programme Australia co-funds; from Canberra's perspective, the NWF cheque increases UK government skin-in-the-game on a programme where Australia has already committed co-development resources.
Temasek (Singapore sovereign co-investor, Isomorphic Series B)
Temasek (Singapore sovereign co-investor, Isomorphic Series B)
Temasek co-invested with the SAIU in Isomorphic's $2.1bn Series B the previous week, treating a majority Alphabet-owned company as a valid sovereign co-investment target. Fractile's round, without a UK sovereign co-investor, reads differently from Singapore's vantage: allied state capital (NATO-IF, In-Q-Tel) is now competing with Asian sovereign funds for early positions in UK deeptech.