TL;DR: Opening a business bank account in a foreign country typically takes 4–12 weeks, requires certified company documents and in-person or video KYC, and is one of the biggest practical bottlenecks in international expansion. Fintech alternatives offer faster paths for basic banking needs.
Of all the practical challenges in international expansion, opening a business bank account abroad is consistently cited as the most frustrating. Company registration may take 24 hours. Bank account opening often takes months.
The reason: banks are at the frontline of anti-money laundering (AML) and Know Your Customer (KYC) regulation. Foreign-owned companies trigger enhanced due diligence requirements. Relationship managers need to understand the business, its beneficial owners, its funding sources, and its expected transaction patterns before approving an account.
Understanding what banks need — and preparing it thoroughly in advance — dramatically reduces the time and rejection risk. This guide walks you through the process country by country and covers the growing fintech alternative ecosystem.
Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD): All seven countries in which MmowW Scrib🐮 operates follow Financial Action Task Force (FATF) recommendations on AML/CFT. Banks must conduct EDD on foreign-owned companies, which involves verifying the ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs), understanding the source of funds, and assessing the business's risk profile.
FATF Gray/Black Lists: Banks will not open accounts for companies with connections to FATF-listed jurisdictions. If any director, shareholder, or UBO is from or based in a high-risk jurisdiction, expect intensive scrutiny or rejection.
Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs): If any director or beneficial owner is a PEP (current or former senior government official, or their close family/associates), enhanced scrutiny applies universally.
Correspondent banking: For foreign currency transactions, banks rely on correspondent banking relationships. If your domestic bank's correspondent relationship with the foreign bank is restricted, cross-border transfers may be problematic.
The precise requirements vary by bank and country, but a complete standard package includes:
For the company:
For each director and UBO (beneficial owner with 25%+ shareholding):
Additional for regulated businesses:
Traditional banks: Most major banks in France, Australia, and Canada still require at least one meeting in person with a relationship manager for foreign-owned accounts. In the UK and USA, some banks now offer video KYC for new company accounts, but in-person visits remain common for higher-risk profiles.
Fintech alternatives: Business-focused fintechs (Wise Business, Revolut Business, Airwallex, Payoneer) often accept fully remote, digital onboarding. They are faster and more flexible but typically offer limited services — multi-currency accounts, international transfers, and basic payment functionality — without lending, credit facilities, or complex treasury services.
For operational purposes (paying suppliers, collecting revenue from customers), fintech accounts often suffice in the early stages. For credit facilities, payroll processing at scale, or customer trust (some customers prefer known bank names), a traditional bank account is still preferable.
| Bank Type | UK | France | Australia | New Zealand | Canada | USA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional bank | 2–8 weeks | 4–12 weeks | 4–8 weeks | 2–6 weeks | 4–8 weeks | 4–12 weeks |
| Fintech alternative | 1–5 days | 3–10 days | 1–5 days | 1–5 days | 1–5 days | 1–5 days |
Use our free tool: Cost Calculator
Try it free →| Country | Dominant Banks | Best Fintech Alternative | Common Requirement | Key Challenge |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | HSBC, Barclays, Lloyds, NatWest | Wise Business, Revolut Business | UK-registered company + certified docs | Anti-money laundering scrutiny post-2020 |
| 🇫🇷 France | BNP Paribas, Société Générale, Crédit Agricole | Qonto, Shine, Revolut Business | SIREN number + statuts certifiés | In-person meetings often required |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | SEB, Nordea, Handelsbanken | Wise Business, Revolut Business | AB registration + organisationsnummer | Swedish-language documentation preferred |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Big 4: ANZ, CBA, NAB, Westpac | Airwallex, Wise Business | ACN + ABN + local director | Local director in-person meeting |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | ANZ NZ, BNZ, ASB, Westpac NZ | Wise Business, Airwallex | NZ company number + NZ resident director | Small banking market; thorough KYC |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | Big 5: RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank, CIBC | Wise Business, Airwallex | Business number + provincial registration | Cross-province complexity |
| 🇺🇸 USA | Bank of America, Chase, Wells Fargo | Mercury, Relay, Wise Business | EIN + state registration | Varying requirements by state and bank |
Note: Mercury and Relay are US-specific banking alternatives popular with international founders for their fully remote onboarding process.
MmowW Scrib🐮 helps you prepare the certified document package needed for business bank account applications.
MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. Always consult a qualified attorney if your company's banking application is rejected or if you face AML/KYC challenges.
Q: My bank account application was rejected — what can I do?
A: First, ask the bank for the specific reason for rejection. Sometimes rejections result from administrative issues (missing documents, uncertified copies) that can be easily remedied with a resubmission. If the rejection is based on the bank's risk appetite or AML policy, try a different bank, a fintech alternative, or consult a professional banking introduction service. Keep records of all applications and rejections.
Q: Can I use my home country bank account for the foreign subsidiary?
A: Technically possible for small transactions, but practically problematic. Most banks charge high fees for foreign currency operations on a domestic account. Local suppliers and employees typically want to be paid from a local account. Tax authorities may scrutinize a company that has no local banking relationship. A local bank account (or at minimum a local multi-currency fintech account) is strongly advisable.
Q: Do I need a business bank account to register a company?
A: For some entity types and jurisdictions, yes. Registering a French SAS or German GmbH requires depositing the share capital into a bank account (or notarial blocking account) as part of the registration process. For UK companies and most common law jurisdictions, there is no requirement to have a bank account before company registration. However, operating without a dedicated business account creates problems for accounting, tax, and demonstrating business purpose.
Loved for Safety. MmowW Scrib🐮 — Document preparation made simple across 7 countries.
Free tools to help you get started:
MmowW Scribe prepares your formation documents, compliance filings, and business paperwork across 7 countries.
Start 14-Day Free Trial →No credit card required. From $149/month.
Loved for Safety.
Lass dich nicht von Vorschriften aufhalten!
Ai-chan🐣 beantwortet deine Compliance-Fragen 24/7 mit KI
Kostenlos testen