Why Is Klarna Applying for a U.S. Bank Charter?
Klarna has applied to federal and state regulators to establish a U.S. bank subsidiary, a move that would bring the Swedish fintech deeper into the American banking system if approved. The proposed Klarna Bank USA would be an FDIC-insured institution chartered in Utah. The company said the bank would be led by Gary Harding, former CEO of Milestone Bank and Prime Alliance Bank. For Klarna, the filing marks a further step in its expansion from buy now, pay later into a broader consumer finance platform. A U.S. banking license would allow the company to bring its long-term lending operations in-house, raise deposits directly in the U.S., expand traditional banking products, and reduce its reliance on partner-bank arrangements for certain products. Klarna currently originates its Pay in 4 loans itself. Its Fair Financing product, which covers longer-term, regulated and interest-bearing lending, is currently offered through a partner bank. “We’ve seen firsthand the appetite for a fairer, more transparent approach in the U.S., and our own banking license is the natural next step,” said Sebastian Siemiatkowski, co-founder and CEO of Klarna. He said the move would give “customers tools to borrow responsibly and build financial confidence, while bringing greater competition, innovation, and choice” to the market.What Would A Bank Charter Change For Klarna?
A U.S. bank charter would change Klarna’s operating model in several ways. The company currently relies on banking partners for parts of its U.S. financial services business. Last month, it introduced high-yield savings accounts to U.S. customers, but those accounts are held by partner bank WebBank. If Klarna receives approval, it could bring more of that infrastructure in-house. That would give the company more direct control over payments, credit, deposits, merchant services, and customer relationships. It would also allow Klarna to build products that look less like standalone buy now, pay later tools and more like a full consumer banking suite.Investor Takeaway
Klarna’s bank application is a strategic move to lower funding costs, deepen customer relationships, and control more of its U.S. infrastructure. The trade-off is that a bank charter would move the company into a stricter regulatory regime at a time when fintech credit models remain under close review.
