Boldrails
Banking

Best High-Risk Business Bank Accounts (EMI), 2026

Claude IgrowAuthorClaude Igrow17 July 202611 min read
A business owner reviewing high-risk business bank account and EMI safeguarding documents on a laptop, account dashboard visible on screen

A high-risk business bank account is almost always an EMI account. It ring-fences 100% of your balance under safeguarding rules but carries no FDIC deposit insurance, the mirror-image trade-off of a US business bank account that is FDIC-insured to $250,000 yet routinely closes high-risk businesses.

Key takeaways
  • For iGaming, forex, and crypto operators, a high-risk business bank account is usually an Electronic Money Institution (EMI) account with EUR and GBP IBANs on SEPA and SWIFT, not a chartered bank account.
  • An EMI must safeguard 100% of client funds (ring-fenced, never lent out), but that balance is not covered by deposit insurance. A US bank insures deposits up to $250,000 per depositor, per bank, per ownership category.
  • A high-risk business bank account holds and settles your money; a high-risk merchant account lets you accept card payments. Most operators need both.
  • US banks avoid gambling flows partly because the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 creates processing liability, and US money services businesses must register with FinCEN.
  • Card networks classify betting and casino activity under MCC 7995, a common trigger for account closure.
  • At Boldrails, onboarding runs 3 to 14 days, depending on your case, and we issue our own EUR and GBP IBANs and USD accounts.

This is not financial or legal advice. Rules change; verify current figures with the regulators linked below before you act.

$250,000
US bank deposit-insurance limit; EMI safeguarding carries $0
100%
Client funds ring-fenced under EMI safeguarding rules
2006
UIGEA creates US processing liability for gambling payments
MCC 7995
Card-network code for betting and casino activity
MSB
US money services businesses must register with FinCEN

What is a high-risk business bank account?

A high-risk business bank account is a business account for a company that banks classify as high-risk because of elevated chargebacks, heavier regulatory scrutiny, or cross-border cash flow. For operators in sectors like iGaming, forex, and crypto, that account is usually held at an Electronic Money Institution rather than a chartered bank.

At Boldrails, I work with operators every week who were told their business was "outside risk appetite" at a mainstream bank. We are a licensed principal. We issue our own EUR and GBP IBANs and USD accounts, hold client funds under safeguarding, and send and receive with any counterparty bank over SEPA and SWIFT. We are not a marketplace that matches you to someone else.

The practical difference from a normal business checking account is acceptance, not the mechanics of a payment. The IBAN works the same way. What changes is that the provider has built its compliance and risk model to keep serving you when a high-street bank would offboard you over a single chargeback spike or an MCC 7995 code.

What is the difference between a high-risk business bank account and a high-risk merchant account?

A high-risk business bank account is where your money lives. A high-risk merchant account is what lets you accept card payments. Most high-risk operators need both, and Google conflates them constantly, which is why searching "high risk business bank account" returns pages about merchant accounts and payment processors.

The distinction matters for how you are regulated and where your risk sits. A bank or EMI account moves money over IBAN, SEPA, SWIFT, ACH, and wire. A merchant account is card acquiring, governed by the card networks and your acquirer, and it is where chargeback liability and rolling reserves bite hardest.

High-risk business bank account compared with a high-risk merchant account.
DimensionHigh-risk business bank accountHigh-risk merchant account
PurposeHold and settle fundsAccept card payments
Money movementIBAN, SEPA, SWIFT, ACH, wireCard acquiring (Visa, Mastercard)
Who regulates itEMI or bank licenceCard networks plus your acquirer
Typical costAccount and FX feesMDR plus rolling reserve
Chargeback exposureIndirectDirect
Do you need itYes, alwaysYes, if you take cards

If you take card payments, you need the acquiring side too. The card networks assign MCC 7995 to betting and casino activity, and that code alone is enough to make many acquirers decline you. We cover the acquiring side through our high-risk merchant account. This article is about the account that holds and settles your money.

Is money in an EMI account FDIC-insured? Safeguarding versus deposit insurance

No. Money in an EMI account is not FDIC-insured. Instead, an EMI must safeguard 100% of client funds by ring-fencing them in a separate safeguarding account, where the institution cannot lend them out or use them for its own business, a duty the FCA sets out in its safeguarding requirements. A US chartered bank works the opposite way: it lends your deposits out under a fractional-reserve model, and the government insures you up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, per ownership category.

One scope note before the table: the safeguarding rules described here are the UK and EU EMI framework, while the deposit-insurance comparison is the US insured-bank regime. They are two different regulatory systems, and this section is comparing them, not blending them.

This is the trade-off that surprises most US operators. The bank gives you deposit insurance but frequently declines or closes high-risk accounts. The EMI is built to accept you and ring-fences every dollar of your balance, but there is no deposit-insurance backstop if the institution itself fails. One protects the money through insurance; the other protects it by not touching it.

EMI safeguarding compared with US FDIC deposit insurance.
ProtectionEMI (safeguarding)US bank (FDIC)
How funds are held100% ring-fenced, not lentFractional reserve (lent out)
Insured?No; safeguarded insteadYes, to $250,000
High-risk acceptanceBuilt for itFrequently declines

Because of this, many US-facing high-risk operators bank through EU or UK EMIs and treat the safeguarding model as the point, not a weakness. That is the pattern I see most often, not a universal rule. At Boldrails we hold funds under safeguarding and hold the licences required in the markets we serve. Separately, money services businesses operating in the US must register with FinCEN and, where they transmit money, hold state money-transmitter licences.

Which are the best high-risk business bank accounts and EMIs in 2026?

There is no single "best" account, because the right provider depends on your vertical, your licence, and the currencies you settle in. Read the matrix below by your own acceptance case first. Find the row that will actually onboard your industry and licence, then compare rails and safeguarding. I have profiled Boldrails honestly alongside the providers operators ask me about most.

No competitor publishes a single table of provider against accepted verticals, prohibited activity, rails, safeguarding, and onboarding time, so here is one.

High-risk business bank account and EMI provider acceptance matrix, 2026.
ProviderAccepted verticalsProhibited or limitedRails and IBANSafeguarding / insuranceOnboarding
BoldrailsiGaming, forex, crypto, e-commerce and other high-risk sectors (by licence and market)Unlicensed or illegal activity, sanctioned parties or jurisdictionsEUR and GBP IBANs, USD accounts, SEPA, SWIFT, ACH, virtual IBANs, crypto-fiatSafeguarding; not deposit-insured3 to 14 days
PayDoE-commerce, forex, crypto, general high-riskSanctioned and unlicensed activity35+ currencies, 150+ countries, SEPA, mass payoutsSafeguardingDays
MoneybaseGeneral business, Malta-licensed (MFSA)Unlicensed gamblingEUR IBAN, SEPASafeguarding1 to 2 weeks
XaceiGaming, gaming, cryptoUnlicensed operatorsGBP and EUR accounts, card issuingSafeguarding1 to 3 weeks
FyorinMulti-currency treasury, high-riskCase by caseMulti-currency, SEPA, SWIFTSafeguarding1 to 2 weeks
OrbitalCrypto, forexUnlicensed cryptoEUR and GBP IBAN, USDT, USDC, BTCSafeguardingDays to weeks
ConnectPayiGaming (Lithuania), e-commerceUnlicensed gamblingEUR IBAN, SEPASafeguarding1 to 3 weeks

Matrix compiled from each provider's public materials, reviewed July 2026. Competitor rows reflect publicly stated acceptance and onboarding, which each provider assesses case by case, so confirm current terms with the provider. Acceptance of any specific business is always subject to our licence coverage and compliance review.

Boldrails. We are a licensed principal built for operators declined elsewhere. We issue our own EUR and GBP IBANs and USD accounts, run SEPA, SWIFT, ACH, and virtual IBANs, settle in fiat or crypto, and process mass payouts. Onboarding is 3 to 14 days, depending on your case, and we serve iGaming, forex, and crypto operators across emerging markets. You can hold and settle in multi-currency IBANs and, where it fits, settle fiat or crypto through our high-risk desk.

The others. PayDo profiles itself as a multi-currency EMI covering 35+ currencies and 150+ countries with SEPA and mass payouts. Moneybase is a Malta-licensed institution (MFSA) serving general business. Xace is a UK-based specialist for gaming and crypto. Fyorin focuses on multi-currency treasury for high-risk businesses. Orbital leans into crypto and stablecoin rails alongside EUR and GBP IBANs. ConnectPay is a Lithuanian EMI that accepts licensed iGaming and e-commerce. Compare live coverage on our acceptance index.

Which industries need a high-risk business bank account?

Banks flag an industry as high-risk when it carries elevated chargebacks, heavier regulatory exposure, or cross-border flows that are expensive to monitor. When a whole sector is coded that way, mainstream banks tend to decline the entire category rather than assess you individually.

The industries that most often need a high-risk business bank account:

  • iGaming, betting, and online casino
  • Forex and CFD brokerage
  • Cryptocurrency and digital-asset businesses
  • Adult entertainment
  • CBD, hemp, and nutraceuticals
  • Multi-level marketing and subscription commerce
  • Travel, ticketing, and events
  • Firearms and ammunition
  • Prop-trading firms

Acceptance always depends on your licence and your market, which is why the same vertical can be approved by one provider and declined by another (see the matrix above). We are built to serve these operators, including regulated iGaming businesses and forex brokers.

Where can high-risk businesses open accounts? The best jurisdictions

Most high-risk operators bank through EU or UK EMIs, because that is where the specialist institutions are licensed. Lithuania, Malta, Cyprus, and Estonia host the bulk of them. Offshore hubs like Curaçao, Anjouan, the Isle of Man, and Gibraltar usually supply the gaming licence, not the operating account.
Jurisdictions where high-risk businesses typically open EMI accounts.
JurisdictionRegulatorTypical onboardingBest for
LithuaniaBank of Lithuania1 to 3 weeksFast SEPA, EMI powerhouse
MaltaMFSA / MGA2 to 4 weeksLicensed iGaming structures
CyprusCySEC-adjacent EMIs2 to 4 weeksForex and PSP-heavy
EstoniaFinancial Supervision Authority1 to 3 weeksFintech and crypto
Offshore (Curaçao, Anjouan, IoM)Local gaming boardsVariesThe gaming licence, not the operating account

The licence you hold shapes which EMI will onboard you. A UK Gambling Commission or Malta Gaming Authority licence opens more doors than a Curaçao or Anjouan permit. Some Asian-facing operators hold a PAGCOR licence, which providers assess separately again. Boldrails issues EUR and GBP IBANs regardless of where your company is domiciled.

How do you open a high-risk business bank account?

Opening a high-risk business bank account is a compliance process, not a form. Expect enhanced due diligence, and prepare your documents before you apply so you do not stall the review.
  1. 1
    Prepare corporate documents and your licence. Certificate of incorporation, ownership structure, and your gaming or financial licence.
  2. 2
    Evidence your owners and money. Ultimate beneficial owner (UBO) identification, plus source of funds and source of wealth (SOF/SOW). Politically exposed person (PEP) checks run here.
  3. 3
    Complete KYB and KYC with enhanced due diligence. The provider reviews your business, your directors, and your processing history.
  4. 4
    Agree the risk terms. This is where any rolling-reserve percentage or hold period is set, based on your chargeback profile.
  5. 5
    Account issued. Your EUR or GBP IBAN goes live and you can send and receive.

At Boldrails we review, approve, and issue directly, and onboarding runs 3 to 14 days, depending on your case. The single biggest cause of delay I see is incomplete UBO or SOF/SOW evidence, so send it in full the first time.

What does a high-risk business bank account cost?

Expect a setup fee, a monthly fee, higher transaction fees than a mainstream account, an FX spread on currency conversions, and often a rolling reserve. The ranges below are market context drawn from public provider information, not Boldrails pricing.
Illustrative cost ranges for high-risk business accounts, by provider type.
Cost itemEMI (market range)Offshore bank (market range)Crypto gateway
Setup feeSeveral hundred to a few thousandHigher, often a retainerLow to none
Monthly feeA few hundredVariableLow
Transaction feeRoughly 1.5% to 3.5%Negotiated0.5% to 2%
Rolling reserve / holdAround 5% to 10%, held 90 to 180 daysCase by caseVaries

Figures above are illustrative market ranges compiled from public provider materials in July 2026, not comparable quotes and not Boldrails pricing. Every provider prices to the individual case.

A rolling reserve is a percentage of your turnover the provider holds back, typically 5% to 10% for 90 to 180 days, as security against chargebacks. Treat these as market ranges to plan around. Boldrails prices to your case: your vertical, monthly volume, and licence set the transaction fee and any reserve, and we confirm the exact numbers in writing after reviewing your application.

Why do banks decline high-risk businesses, and how do you get approved?

Mainstream banks de-risk whole sectors because the chargebacks, cross-border flows, and AML exposure outweigh the revenue a single account brings in. In the US, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 adds direct liability for processing unlawful internet gambling, and FinCEN registration obligations raise the compliance cost further. The FDIC has warned banks against blanket de-risking, but in practice the whole category often gets dropped rather than assessed one business at a time.

The most common rejection reasons, and how to pre-empt them:

  1. 1
    Unclear licence. Hold a recognised gaming or financial licence and lead with it.
  2. 2
    Opaque ownership. Provide clean UBO documentation and be ready for PEP checks.
  3. 3
    Unexplained funds. Have source-of-funds and source-of-wealth evidence ready.
  4. 4
    Unrealistic projections. Give volumes you can actually support; inflated numbers read as risk.

We are built to accept the operators mainstream banks decline, as a licensed principal that holds accounts directly. If your account was recently closed or declined, read what to do when your business bank account is declined for the immediate steps.

If you have been declined, offboarded, or frozen elsewhere, tell us your vertical, monthly volume, and licence, and we will tell you honestly whether we can onboard you.

Frequently asked questions

No. A bank account holds and settles your funds over IBAN, SEPA, and SWIFT. A merchant account lets you accept card payments and is where chargeback liability sits. Most high-risk operators need both.