Definition
Embedded finance natively integrates financial services — account, card, transfer, credit, insurance, savings — into a non-financial product (e-commerce, marketplace, HR, mobility, SaaS).
The end customer never feels like they are using a bank: finance is invisible or just one feature among others. Uber pays its drivers into a built-in wallet, Shopify Capital lends to merchants, Tesla offers insurance at the point of purchase.
The general idea
The need for a financial service often arises in the context of another product: a Shopify merchant needs cash, an Uber driver needs to advance their earnings, a Booking traveller needs insurance. Rather than redirecting to an external player, the platform embeds the service, which maximises:
- conversion (the customer is in the right context);
- data (the platform knows its customer better than the bank does);
- the native UX, without redirection;
- additional revenue (commission or margin).
Embedded finance vs BaaS vs Open Banking
| Embedded finance | BaaS | Open Banking | |
|---|---|---|---|
| What | Finance inside a non-financial product | Banking infrastructure as an API | Regulated access to data / payments |
| Who | Non-banking platform (Uber, Shopify) | EC / EME (Treezor, Solaris) | Bank (ASPSP) → TPP |
| Why | Product strategy | B2B provider model | Regulation (DSP2) |
| Link | Often consumes BaaS | Provides the banking layer | Available technical building block |
BaaS is a means of doing embedded finance; not all embedded finance uses BaaS (sometimes a simple white-label partnership).
The building blocks
- Embedded payments: paying within the app without leaving it (Uber, Airbnb).
- Embedded accounts: a dedicated account or wallet (Uber Wallet, Lyft Direct).
- Embedded cards: a white-label card (Tesla Card).
- Embedded lending: credit or an advance in the flow (Shopify Capital, Stripe Capital, embedded Klarna BNPL).
- Embedded insurance: insurance offered at purchase (Tesla Insurance, Trainline).
- Embedded investments: built-in investing, mainly in the US (Apple Card Savings, Acorns).
The business model
Revenue is shared between the platform (margin on the service + data to score better), the BaaS provider or partner (fees per account, card, transaction, sometimes revenue share) and the network (interchange, scheme fees). For the platform, this markedly increases revenue per user — hence the appetite from vertical SaaS players.
Exemplary use cases
- Uber: Uber Wallet pays out earnings instantly (vs D+5), with an associated card and EWA in some countries.
- Shopify Capital: pre-approved credit based on the merchant's sales, repaid as a % of future sales, with no paperwork.
- Stripe: the Capital / Treasury / Issuing suite to finance, host virtual accounts and issue cards.
- Apple Pay Later (US): native BNPL inside Apple Wallet, suspended in 2024 but widely imitated.
- Tesla Insurance: car insurance priced on the driver's actual telemetry.
- Booking: travel insurance at checkout via partners (Allianz, Europ Assistance).
What embedded finance is not
- Not a banking status: the platform relies on a regulated partner (BaaS, insurer, lender).
- Not just a payment integration: accepting Stripe is embedded payment, but the ground floor — real embedded finance goes all the way to credit, accounts and insurance.
- Not without responsibility: the platform keeps the UX, tier-1 support, sometimes the risk (Shopify Capital).
- Not reserved for the giants: vertical B2B SaaS players (Lightspeed, Tiller) do it too, on a smaller scale.
In the PSD2 ecosystem
Embedded finance relies heavily on AIS (credit scoring, KYC, built-in PFM) and PIS (account-to-account payments as a card alternative). DSP2 made many of these uses possible; FIDA (2027+) will open the way to wealth-oriented embedded finance (savings, life insurance, credit).
Concrete examples
- Marketplaces: Vinted integrates payment, delivery and insurance; Uber Eats invoices restaurants and advances them cash.
- Vertical B2B SaaS: Lightspeed Capital (credit based on POS flows), Shopify Capital and Shopify Balance, Mindbody (fitness financing).
- Mobility: Uber Wallet, Lyft Direct, DoorDash DasherDirect — accounts and cards for drivers and couriers.
- France: Qonto integrates credit (Defacto), business insurance (Stello) and invoice advance (Karmen); Pennylane integrates payroll and business insurance.
- Embedded BNPL: Klarna, Alma, Scalapay, FLOA Pay — a button built into the checkout, without redirection.
- Treezor: operates the BaaS behind many verticals (Pixpay, Swile, family accounts), each one a case of embedded finance.
- Limits: trust to build (a customer does not necessarily want an account inside Uber), risk concentration (where does the wallet money go if the platform fails?), growing regulation (DORA, AML).
- Evolution: integration of the EUDI Wallet for instant onboarding, and of FIDA for wealth advice within non-financial platforms.