Manila Gets a Fintech Glow-Up as Revolut Launches New Tech HQ

Revolut just dropped a fintech bombshell, and it landed squarely in the heart of Manila.
On July 9, the London-born digital banking giant announced the launch of a brand-new global tech hub in the Philippines—a move that promises to crank Southeast Asia’s innovation gears into overdrive while creating hundreds of new jobs for local talent.
In true startup-to-superpower fashion, Revolut is aiming to fuse customer obsession with global scalability, and apparently, Manila is where that vision gets turbocharged.
The company, now serving more than 60 million users globally, isn’t just planting a flag in the Philippines—it’s staking a future.
This new Global Capability Center (GCC) in Manila will work across time zones and continents, supporting operations in the UK, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and the Americas.
But behind the corporate jargon lies a sharper message: this isn’t outsourcing. It’s Reinventing Outsourcing™—with Revolut’s signature blend of tech swagger and regulatory muscle.
“We’re not just here to fill seats,” said Raymond Ng, Revolut’s Chief Executive Officer for Singapore & Southeast Asia. “We’re laying the foundation for sustained operations and expansion.”
Translation? The company wants the Philippines to become the nerve center of its global customer experience empire.
Ng insists this isn’t a quick cash grab either.
The plan includes “high-value jobs” and “digital upskilling” in a nation already touted as the global capital for customer service.
And the local government is eating it up.
“This is a resounding vote of confidence,” said Finance Secretary Ralph G. Recto, sounding like a proud tech dad at a graduation ceremony.
He added that Revolut’s investment “sends a clear message to the world” about the Philippines’ readiness to lead the fintech charge.
The Department of Finance isn’t alone in its fintech fanboying.
Martin Kent, His Majesty’s Trade Commissioner for Asia Pacific, also gave Revolut a diplomatic pat on the back, calling it “a testament to the UK-Philippines trade partnership.”
This is Revolut’s second major tech buildout in Asia.
India got first dibs in 2021 and now hosts thousands of employees doing everything from product development to financial crime prevention.
Apparently, the Philippines was the next logical stop—because when you combine a young, English-speaking workforce with digital literacy and a government allergic to red tape, you get what Revolut calls a “natural choice.”
And while some companies throw around the term “remote-first” like it’s a sticker on their Zoom license, Revolut means it.
The firm’s decentralized, globally distributed structure is built for hiring talent anywhere with Wi-Fi and ambition.
This new hub also underscores the company’s growing focus on Asia—a region where digital wallets, super apps, and QR-code payments are more than buzzwords.
For Revolut, it’s not just about riding the fintech wave—it’s about building the surfboard.
The company’s strategy echoes what McKinsey called a “distributed global delivery model,” which reduces risk and cost while increasing resilience.
And given that Revolut already handles over half a billion transactions per month, resilience isn’t a luxury—it’s survival.
So what’s the real play here?
For starters, Revolut isn’t just scaling—it’s anchoring itself to a future where innovation doesn’t come from Silicon Valley alone.
Instead, it’s being coded in Manila, debugged in Mumbai, and rolled out in London—all before you finish your morning latte.
In short, Revolut didn’t come to the Philippines to dip its toes.
It cannonballed into the deep end, and now it’s dragging the whole Southeast Asian fintech ecosystem along for the ride.
Welcome to the next chapter in the fintech saga—co-authored by a bunch of bright minds in Metro Manila.
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