Sign In

Meet the top 20 hottest payment companies

1. GoCardless — London
gocardless.com

Go cardlessWhat it does: Process­es any direct deb­it pay­ment in a clean­er, sim­pler, quick­er way.

Why it’s hot: Hav­ing become the UK’s lead­ing direct deb­it provider, the com­pa­ny is launch­ing new prod­ucts, and focus­ing its atten­tions on larg­er busi­ness­es and for­eign mar­kets, start­ing with Europe. Now pro­cess­ing trans­ac­tions at a rate of $500 mil­lion a year.

 

2. Transferwise — London
transferwise.com

Transferwise

What it does: Trans­par­ent, low-cost inter­na­tion­al mon­ey trans­fers.

Why it’s hot: Recent­ly received invest­ment that val­ues the com­pa­ny at almost $1 bil­lion and has an impres­sive list of back­ers. Has trans­ferred £1 bil­lion of its cus­tomers’ mon­ey and tripled its staff to 300 in the last year with inter­na­tion­al offices.

 

3. Stripe — San Francisco
stripe.com

StripeWhat it does: Online pay­ments tech­nol­o­gy allows pay­ments through an app or web­site.

Why it’s hot: Work­ing on e‑commerce with Apple, Face­book and Twit­ter. Total invest­ment has reached $190 mil­lion and the com­pa­ny has recent­ly been val­ued at $3.5 bil­lion, more than dou­ble its val­u­a­tion less than a year before.

 

Related content: “The Payment Services Directive: why our big banks need to learn to share”

Related content: “Payments shake-up is a Brexit farewell”

 

4. Venmo — New York and San Francisco
venmo.com

VenmoWhat it does: App links to users’ bank accounts and allows instant free mon­ey trans­fers.

Why it’s hot: Although under pres­sure from new­er apps that serve a sim­i­lar pur­pose, Ven­mo is still the best-known mobile app for free mon­ey trans­fers between friends and has the back­ing of par­ent com­pa­ny Pay­Pal. Scope to be used by mer­chants for a fee.

 

5. Adyen — Amsterdam
adyen.com

AdyenWhat it does: Pay­ments plat­form for almost any type of pay­ment, any­where in the world.

Why it’s hot: Closed a $250-mil­lion fund­ing round at the end of last year that val­ued the com­pa­ny at $1.5 bil­lion and is tar­get­ing growth in the Asia-Pacif­ic region. Has signed up 3,500 mer­chants, includ­ing Face­book, AirBnB and Groupon.

 

6. Tipalti — Israel and Palo Alto
tipalti.com

TipaltiWhat it does: Stream­lines and auto­mates busi­ness pay­ments to large num­bers of pay­ees.

Why it’s hot: Designed to take care of reg­u­la­to­ry and tax require­ments, even when pay­ees are in mul­ti­ple coun­tries. Cur­rent­ly serves more than 250,000 pay­ees glob­al­ly and process­es over $1 bil­lion annu­al­ly.

 

Related content: ‘Access is life-changing – we’re denying access to payments accounts to those we should support’

Related content: “Global payments: sparking a remittance revolution”

 

7. Ant Financial — Hangzhou and Shanghai
global.alipay.com

Ant financialWhat it does: A range of tech­nol­o­gy-based finan­cial ser­vices, includ­ing Ali­pay.

Why it’s hot: Cur­rent­ly has a user-base of 300 mil­lion, han­dles 80 mil­lion trans­ac­tions a day and accounts for half the Chi­nese e‑commerce mar­ket, pro­cess­ing $519 bil­lion in pay­ments dur­ing 2013. Reports sug­gest the com­pa­ny intends to seek fund­ing in main­land Chi­na.

 

8. PayPal — Palo Alto
paypal.com

Paypal logoWhat it does: Online mon­ey trans­fers and owns small­er pay­ments com­pa­nies.

Why it’s hot: Found­ed in 1998, the com­pa­ny went pub­lic in 2002 before becom­ing a whol­ly owned sub­sidiary of eBay lat­er that year. In 2013, rev­enue increased by 20 per cent to $6.6 bil­lion, but in 2014 plans were announced to detach the com­pa­ny from eBay.

 

9. Razorpay — California and Bangalore
razorpay.com

Razorpay logoWhat it does: Enables com­pa­nies to accept online pay­ments through their web­site.

Why it’s hot: Oper­ates in India where improv­ing tech­nol­o­gy infra­struc­ture and a pop­u­la­tion of 1.3 bil­lion means the online pay­ments mar­ket has the poten­tial to grow rapid­ly. Co-founders have been work­ing with US tech incu­ba­tor Y Com­bi­na­tor.

 

10. Square — San Francisco
squareup.com

Square logoWhat it does: Mobile pay­ments and sales reg­is­ter app.

Why it’s hot: Although threat­ened by an increas­ing num­ber of com­peti­tors, the $5‑billion com­pa­ny has launched its app in mul­ti­ple lan­guages in more than 100 coun­tries. It will begin to accept Apple Pay this year and has done a deal with Snapchat.

 

11. Snapchat — Venice, California
snapchat.com

Snapchat logoWhat it does: Huge­ly pop­u­lar mes­sag­ing and con­tent app with added pay­ments func­tion.

Why it’s hot: Once a Snapchat user has reg­is­tered a deb­it card they can send mon­ey to a contact’s bank account by just typ­ing the dol­lar sym­bol and required amount. With some 100 mil­lion users already signed up to the ser­vice, the add-on has a huge ready-made audi­ence.

 

12. Boku — San Francisco
boku.com

boku logoWhat it does: Allows con­sumers to make online pur­chas­es using their mobile phone account.

Why it’s hot: Has received $73 mil­lion in fund­ing, oper­ates in 70 coun­tries and done deals with Face­book, Spo­ti­fy and Sony. Has the poten­tial to ser­vice huge num­bers of unbanked peo­ple in mar­kets where sophis­ti­cat­ed, for­mal bank accounts aren’t the norm.

 

13. Apple Pay — Cupertino, California
apple.com/uk/apple-pay

Apple Pay logoWhat it does: Con­tact­less pay­ment tech­nol­o­gy built into the US tech giant’s newest devices.

Why it’s hot: US users of the iPhone 6, Apple Watch and oth­er new Apple prod­ucts are now able to pay for real-world pur­chas­es by swip­ing their device at hun­dreds of thou­sands of loca­tions. The ser­vice will be launched in oth­er ter­ri­to­ries lat­er this year and into 2016.

 

14. Poynt — Palo Alto
getpoynt.com

Get poynt logoWhat it does: A “future-proofed” pay­ment ter­mi­nal from the for­mer head of Google Wal­let.

Why it’s hot: The sin­gle piece of hard­ware can process pay­ments from magstripe cards, chip-and-PIN, NFC (near-field com­mu­ni­ca­tion) tech­nol­o­gy, Blue­tooth, QR codes and bea­con tech­nol­o­gy. Has agree­ments with at least two of the US’s top five banks.

 

15. Zomato — New Delhi
zomato.com

zomato logoWhat it does: Restau­rant search app with pay­ments plat­form Maple­POS.

Why it’s hot: A cash-and-equi­ty deal, thought to val­ue Maple­POS at more than $1 bil­lion, opens Zoma­to up to pro­vid­ing a range of busi­ness-to-busi­ness ser­vices to restau­rants, while keep­ing its grow­ing num­ber of con­sumers – 35 mil­lion users a month – hap­py.

 

16. M‑Pesa — Nairobi
mpesa.in

Mpsea logoWhat it does: Mobile mon­ey ser­vice.

Why it’s hot: Voda­fone sub­sidiary allows users with­out a bank account to pay for every­thing from gro­ceries to util­i­ties and air­line tick­ets using their mobile phone. Already used by 59 per cent of Kenyan adults, the com­pa­ny process­es $2.1 bil­lion in trans­ac­tions month­ly.

 

17. Paytm — New Delhi
paytm.com

Paytm logoWhat it does: Pay­ment ser­vices provider.

Why it’s hot: At the van­guard of busi­ness­es offer­ing mobile mon­ey ser­vices to India’s 720 mil­lion unbanked adults, it applied for a licence to become one of the first non-bank enti­ties to pro­vide finan­cial ser­vices there. China’s Ant Finan­cial owns 25 per cent of the com­pa­ny.

 

18. Google Wallet — Mountain View, California
google.com/wallet

Google wallet logoWhat it does: The NFC and online pay­ments plat­form from Google.

Why it’s hot: Google Wal­let was estab­lished in 2011, long before Apple Pay went live. Its recent acqui­si­tion of Soft­card, a joint ven­ture between three of the US’s big four mobile net­works, means Google Wal­let will be pre-loaded in new Android phones.

 

19. Facebook — Menlo Park, California
facebook.com

Facebook logoWhat it does: Pay­ments fea­ture on Facebook’s Mes­sen­ger app and web­site.

Why it’s hot: Although only avail­able so far in the US, the ser­vice is sim­ple to use and pur­ports to be pro­tect­ed by robust secu­ri­ty mea­sures. Users can also choose to set up a PIN or use Apple’s Touch ID fin­ger­print secu­ri­ty sys­tem on new iOS devices.

 

20. Klarna — Stockholm
klarna.com

klarna logoWhat it does: Online pay­ments busi­ness with an expand­ing range of ser­vices.

Why it’s hot: One of Europe’s few $1‑billion tech com­pa­nies, Klar­na is eye­ing expan­sion into the US and UK, and adding to its ser­vices. New func­tions could include peer-to-peer mon­ey trans­fers, pay­ment for pub­lic trans­port and inno­v­a­tive ways of pay­ing for sin­gle items.

 

Related content:

The Pay­ment Ser­vices Direc­tive: why our big banks need to learn to share

Cash­ing in on pay­ments tech inno­va­tions

Pay­ments shake-up is a Brex­it farewell

Who will win the bat­tle for peer-to-peer pay­ments?