Desktop | Revolut

Author: [Generated for Academic Review] Date: April 14, 2026 Abstract Revolut, a leading global neobank, has traditionally operated under a "mobile-first" paradigm, offering its full suite of banking, trading, and cryptocurrency services exclusively via smartphone applications. As the company matures from a fintech challenger into a comprehensive financial ecosystem, the absence of a dedicated desktop interface (web or native application) represents a growing operational and strategic limitation. This paper analyzes the technical feasibility, user demand, security implications, and competitive positioning of a Revolut Desktop platform. It concludes that while mobile remains primary, a hybrid desktop offering is essential for capturing high-net-worth individuals, professional traders, and business clients, provided Revolut can address cross-device synchronization and advanced threat vectors. 1. Introduction The fintech landscape has evolved significantly since Revolut’s founding in 2015. Initially, mobile-only models disrupted traditional banking by reducing overhead and offering real-time notifications. However, competitors like Monzo (limited web access), N26 (full web interface), and traditional brokers (e.g., Interactive Brokers, TradingView) have proven that serious financial activities—such as multi-chart technical analysis, bulk transaction reconciliation, and tax reporting—are inefficient on a 6-inch screen.

| Threat | Mobile | Desktop | Mitigation Strategy | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Phishing | Lower (app-based) | Higher (fake websites) | Mandatory hardware token/U2F key for desktop login | | Keylogging | Rare | Possible | On-screen PIN pad for sensitive actions | | Session hijacking | Biometric bound | Cookie-based | Short-lived JWTs + device fingerprinting | | Malware | Sandboxed | OS-level | Require OS security checks (e.g., TPM 2.0) | revolut desktop