Americans who live and work internationally are seeing meaningful improvements in their finances, work-life balance, and overall quality of life, according to new research from bunq’s Global Living...
New data from bunq, Europe’s second largest neobank, reveals nearly half of Irish digital nomads (49%) never changed jobs when they moved abroad, exposing a quiet remote work revolution, driven by ...
Europe’s second largest neobank files for an Institución de Banca Múltiple license. The application answers growing demand for a bank that is global, safe, and easy to use bunq will focus on the ma...
bunq, Europe’s second-largest neobank, announced its partnership with Dutch Bitcoin platform Blockrise as part of bunq’s new Banking-as-a-Service (BaaS) offering.
bunq surpasses €100m traded in first year of offering crypto. On the anniversary of bunq Crypto which has seen €100m traded, the neobank introduces new tools to make investing simpler and safer tha...
More than one in three Americans are already using AI to help make financial decisions, with a widening gap emerging between users and non-users when it comes to saving and managing money.
bunq has released new research revealing that UK users trust their bank more than any other source of financial advice, yet remain among the most sceptical in Europe when it comes to AI in banking.
bunq, Europe’s second-largest neobank, has commissioned new research revealing that nearly half of UK adults (47%) have already used AI to make a personal finance decision, and the returns are far ...
Irish users increasingly expect artificial intelligence to play a central role in protecting their finances from fraud, according to new research by bunq, Europe’s second largest neobank.
According to a recent survey by bunq, Europe’s second-largest neobank, more than a third of Irish users say they are more honest about money with AI than with other people; pointing to a shift in h...
tricount by bunq, a global go-to app that automates group expense tracking for nights out, holidays, and housemates, published its annual wrap-up, tallying British users’ shared expenses in 2025.