Trade Republic now issues Portuguese IBANs — and pays 3% to rattle the banks
Trade Republic has opened a Portuguese branch: clients get a PT50 IBAN and 3% annual interest on uninvested cash. MB Way integration is under study.
Trade Republic is everywhere in Portugal’s financial news this Thursday, and for good reason. The German digital bank has officially opened a Portuguese branch, which means its Portuguese clients trade in their German IBAN for a national one starting with PT50 — the small detail that makes all the difference when your employer or landlord side-eyes a foreign account number.
Alongside the new plates, the offer that made traditional banks wince stays put: 3% annual interest on cash sitting in the account, no lock-ups, no penalties. It’s a direct shot at Revolut — the rival fighting for the same branch-allergic crowd — and it lands at a moment when term deposits have started paying something again, though rarely this much.
What changes for existing Trade Republic users?
The migration is automatic and arriving by notification: accept the Portuguese branch’s new terms and your German IBAN is swapped for a Portuguese one. The company claims more than 2.2 million clients across Iberia, over 200,000 of them in Portugal, and its country chief’s stated ambition is to become the country’s number-one bank within five years. Account details are on Trade Republic’s official site.
Will Trade Republic get MB Way?
It’s under study, with no promise and no timeline: the company says it’s waiting on customer feedback before deciding. Until then, anyone who can’t live without MB Way — roughly the entire country — will keep a second account on the side.
In a summer when even Glovo changed hands, the day’s message is plain: Portuguese banking is no longer a closed club, and the newest challenger arrives with a local IBAN.
By Beatriz Mota
Imagem: Trade Republic