Boldrails
Banking

EMI account vs bank account: what is the real difference?

Claude IgrowAuthorClaude Igrow17 July 20269 min read
A UK business owner comparing an EMI account and a bank account side by side on a laptop, sort code and IBAN details visible on screen

An EMI account and a bank account look identical day to day, with the same UK sort code, IBAN and Faster Payments access, but the legal structure underneath decides whether your money is guaranteed. A UK bank is authorised by the Prudential Regulation Authority to take deposits and lend, with FSCS protection up to £120,000. An FCA-authorised electronic money institution (EMI) issues e-money and safeguards your funds instead, so the balance carries no £120,000 FSCS guarantee.

I have spent years helping high-risk and cross-border businesses set up the accounts they actually need, and this single distinction, safeguarding versus FSCS, is the one most founders get wrong. So here is the plain version. Below I break down what each account really is, what protects your money, what an EMI can and cannot do, and how to verify a provider before you move a penny.

This is not financial or legal advice. Every figure below is sourced to a UK regulator or primary text and dated to July 2026.

Key takeaways
£120,000
FSCS deposit protection cap, per eligible person per authorised firm, from 1 Dec 2025
Source: fscs.org.uk
£0 FSCS
Guarantee on an EMI e-money balance (protected by safeguarding instead)
Source: fca.org.uk
€350,000
Minimum initial capital an authorised EMI must hold
Source: legislation.gov.uk
11.4%
UK business bank-account applications declined in a single year
Source: fca.org.uk (Jul 2022 to Jun 2023)

What is an EMI account (electronic money institution)?

An EMI account is a payment account issued by an FCA-authorised electronic money institution: it holds e-money and moves payments under the Electronic Money Regulations 2011, but it is not a bank.

One quick disambiguation before we go further: EMI here means Electronic Money Institution, not the Equated Monthly Installment loan-repayment term you may have seen elsewhere.

A bank takes your deposit onto its own balance sheet and can lend it out. An EMI can't do that. It takes your money as e-money and has to keep it separate from its own funds. That is why the FCA authorises and lists every EMI on its register, and why an authorised EMI has to hold €350,000 of initial capital under the regulations.

Boldrails sits on the EMI side of this line. We are a licensed e-money principal: we issue e-money, we hold client funds under safeguarding, and we settle across payment rails. We don't call ourselves a bank, because we are not one, and that kind of honesty matters when your money is on the table.

EMI account vs bank account: what is the real difference?

Day to day the two are almost interchangeable; the real difference is the regulatory structure underneath, and it is set out in the table below.
EMI vs UK bank vs Boldrails as an e-money principal, by regulator, protection and typical use.
DimensionFCA-authorised EMIPRA-authorised UK bankBoldrails (e-money principal)
Primary regulatorFCAPRA and FCAEU e-money institution regime
Customer balanceE-moneyEligible depositE-money
Money protectionSafeguarding (EMRs 2011)FSCS up to £120,000 (from 1 Dec 2025)Safeguarding
Takes depositsNoYesNo
Lending and overdraftNo, not from safeguarded fundsYesNo, we settle, we do not lend
Multi-currency and IBANProvider-dependentProvider-dependentGBP and EUR IBANs, plus USD accounts
High-risk vertical acceptanceVariesRarelyBuilt for iGaming, forex, crypto and e-commerce
Typical usePayments, collections, cross-border, FXOperating account, lending, treasuryCollect, hold, convert and distribute across borders

An authorised EMI has to hold €350,000 of initial capital and keep customer funds ring-fenced. That is a real prudential bar, even though it is not deposit-taking. The most common myth I correct is the sort-code one: a UK sort code or an IBAN does not make a provider a bank. Payment institutions and EMIs get issued sort codes and IBANs too, so the account details tell you nothing about how your money is protected.

Is your money safe? Safeguarding vs FSCS deposit protection

Money in an EMI account is protected by safeguarding, not FSCS, so there is no £120,000 guarantee if the provider fails; you should still recover most of it, just more slowly than a seven-working-day FSCS payout.

Money in an EMI account is protected by safeguarding, not FSCS: the EMI ring-fences your funds at a credit institution or in qualifying assets, but there is no £120,000 guarantee, and if the EMI fails you should get most of your money back through an insolvency process, which is slower than a seven-working-day FSCS payout. How much you recover depends on how cleanly the funds were segregated and on the costs of the administration, so it is a strong protection, not a guaranteed one.

That is the honest picture. It helps to be precise about the three regimes a UK or EU business is likely to compare:

The FCA has finalised a strengthened safeguarding regime in PS25/12, which takes effect on 7 May 2026 and tightens how firms hold and reconcile customer money. Boldrails holds client funds under safeguarding, segregated from our own money. That is the same model, described plainly. Safeguarding on its own does not turn an EMI balance into an FSCS-covered deposit. The one exception: since the PRA's 2023 depositor-protection rule change, FSCS can look through to compensate eligible end customers, up to £120,000, if the bank holding an EMI's safeguarded funds fails, a bank-failure scenario, not an EMI-failure one.

What can an EMI account do, and what can it not do?

An EMI account does almost everything a business current account does, minus deposits and lending. Here is the honest split.

It can:

  • Hold GBP, EUR and USD balances
  • Issue IBANs and UK sort codes
  • Send and receive through Faster Payments, CHAPS, Bacs, SWIFT and SEPA, directly or through Pay.UK agency access
  • Convert currency
  • Issue payment cards
  • Run mass payouts
  • Offer API access for automation

It cannot:

  • Take deposits onto its own balance sheet
  • Offer bank-style lending or overdrafts from your safeguarded funds
  • Put FSCS on the balance

And whether a given EMI supports every currency or rail is provider-dependent, so check the list before you commit.

At Boldrails we issue IBANs, settle across those rails, and run mass payouts as a licensed e-money principal; you can see the account and currency detail on our multi-currency IBAN accounts page. API access is scoped to the payment gateway rather than the account itself.

Why do high-risk and de-banked businesses choose an EMI?

Because a UK high-street bank will often decline or off-board them, and an EMI is the realistic settlement rail rather than a downgrade.

The FCA found that up to 11.4% of business account applications were declined in a single year, and the sharpest scrutiny falls on iGaming, forex and CFD, crypto, adult and money-service businesses. From 28 April 2026, UK payment providers must give at least 90 days' notice and a specific written reason before closing an account under the government's debanking reform (announced by HM Treasury). That helps. But it does not force a bank to accept a high-risk vertical in the first place.

A high-risk business owner in an iGaming or forex office reviewing EMI account approval documents

This is exactly who we built Boldrails for. We are a licensed e-money principal that accepts verticals banks routinely turn away, we onboard in 3 to 14 days depending on your case, and we hold and settle multi-currency balances so you can keep trading. We describe acceptance at the capability level rather than promising a specific country, and you can check what we currently support on our acceptance index. If your account has already been closed, start with our guide on what to do when a business bank account is declined, then look at our business accounts and high-risk merchant accounts for the settlement side.

When should you use a bank, an EMI, or both?

Use a bank when you need lending or an overdraft, or a counterparty that specifically requires a PRA-authorised bank; use an EMI when you need fast onboarding, multi-currency accounts and cross-border payments, or when a bank has declined you; and use both when you are internationally active, which most growing businesses eventually are.
  • Choose a bank if: you need credit, an overdraft, cash handling, or a lender relationship.
  • Choose an EMI if: you need multi-currency IBANs, quick onboarding, cross-border settlement, or high-risk acceptance.
  • Use both if: you want a bank for borrowing and an EMI for day-to-day multi-currency operations and payouts, which is how we see most treasury setups work in practice; our settlement engine is designed to sit alongside a bank, not replace it.

Consumer-facing names blur this line, which is why "is Revolut a bank" and "is Wise a bank" are such common searches. The short version: some of these entities are authorised banks, some operate as electronic money institutions, and the status can differ by country and change over time, so always confirm on the register rather than trusting the brand.

How do you choose and verify an EMI (check the FCA register)?

Verify the firm on the FCA Financial Services Register before you send money, and read its safeguarding disclosure. It takes five minutes, and it is the single best due-diligence step you can take.
  1. 1
    Search the FCA register by the provider's legal entity or trading name.
  2. 2
    Confirm the firm type is an authorised electronic money institution, not a small EMI or an agent of another firm.
  3. 3
    Match the legal entity to the brand you are signing up with; the marketing name and the licensed entity are not always the same.
  4. 4
    Read the safeguarding disclosure : where are client funds held, and with which institution.
  5. 5
    Check the currencies, rails and business types the provider actually supports, because these vary widely.

Boldrails is a licensed e-money principal and holds the licences required in the markets we serve. If you want the account without the guesswork, we can usually get you approved in 3 to 14 days depending on your case.

If a bank has declined you, or you need multi-currency settlement a high street account can't give you, we can help.

Frequently asked questions

A bank is a PRA-authorised deposit taker that can lend and carries FSCS protection up to £120,000. An EMI is an FCA-authorised e-money issuer: it safeguards your funds rather than holding them as deposits, it cannot lend from those safeguarded funds, and its balance is not FSCS-protected. Day to day both give you a sort code, an IBAN and the same payment rails.

What this means

This is not financial or legal advice. For decisions about deposit protection, licensing or your specific situation, check the primary sources linked above or speak to a qualified adviser. Reviewed by the Boldrails Compliance Team. Author credentials: Claude Igrow on LinkedIn.