/retail banking

News and resources on retail banking, consumer finance and reinventing customer experience in finance.

Visa launches open banking with Tink in the US

Visa has launched open banking in the US, using technology from recently acquired Swedish vendor Tink.

  8 1 comment

Visa launches open banking with Tink in the US

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

Visa completed the €1.8 billion acquisition of Tink in March 2022 and has now made it available for US users to connect accounts and provide trusted parties with access to their financial data.

In Europe, the Visa/Tink duopoly has already won deals with Adyen and Revolut. For the US launch, Visa has signed data access agreements with banks and fintechs on the merchant side, including Capital One, Fiserv, Jack Henry, Dwolla and Max rewards.

Available via a single console, user can currently access financial data to confirm bank account data, run real-time balance checks and fetch transaction data from thousands of banks across the US.

Visa CEO Ryan McInerny states: "Just about two years ago we acquired Tink as we saw opportunity in open banking. Over those two years, we have been expanding our presence in Europe, winning deals with Adyen and Revolut. We’re now expanding open banking solutions through Tink into the United States.”

A recent survey conducted by Visa found that 87 percent of US consumers already use some form of open banking to link their financial accounts to third parties. But with only 34 percent of consumers aware that open banking enables these services, Visa is embarking on a consumer education campaign to highlight the benefits.

Sponsored [Webinar] Solving the KYC challenge with end-to-end processes

Related Company

Channels

Keywords

Comments: (1)

Ketharaman Swaminathan

Ketharaman Swaminathan Founder and CEO at GTM360 Marketing Solutions

When Visa abandoned its plan to acquire PLAID, the reason given by pundits was potential antitrust objections. Won't the same antitrust objections be raised about its TINK-powered offering?

Or was antitrust just a smokescreen to avoid paying $5.3B for PLAID when it could get Tink for a substantially lower price ($2B)?

On a side note, by making an explicit pitch for Open Banking technology in its video, Visa has completely undermined the popular misconception that customers don't care about technology.

[New Report] Managing Fraud Risks with Synthetic Data: A Practical Approach for Businesses ServicesFinextra Promoted[New Report] Managing Fraud Risks with Synthetic Data: A Practical Approach for Businesses Services Industry