Scalable Capital is a German digital investment platform and bank based in Munich. Founded in 2014, it launched as a robo-advisor in 2016 and later expanded into self-directed brokerage and banking services. It offers brokerage, wealth management, and banking on its platform. Customers have access to digital wealth management, stock exchange trading, savings plans, securities loans, and a private equity offering.

Scalable Capital
Company type
Private
IndustryFinancial technology
Founded2014
FoundersErik Podzuweit
Florian Prucker
Adam French
Stefan Mittnik
Headquarters,
Area served
Germany, Austria, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands
Key people
Erik Podzuweit (co-CEO)
Florian Prucker (co-CEO)
ServicesOnline brokerage
Digital wealth management
Banking services
AUM€30 billion (2025)
Websitescalable.capital

Together with Börse Hannover, Scalable Capital has been operating the trading venue European Investor Exchange (EIX) since 2023.[1] In 2025, the company received a full banking licence from the European Central Bank. By 2025, the platform held more than €30 billion for over one million customers and was active in Germany, Austria, France, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands.

History

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Scalable Capital was founded in Munich in 2014 by investment banker Erik Podzuweit, Florian Prucker, Adam French and Stefan Mittnik as a startup company.[2][3][4]

The company launched in 2016 as a robo-advisor for automated wealth management and entered the UK market the same year.[5] In 2017, Scalable Capital entered into a partnership with the German bank ING Germany to offer a fully digital investment service to the bank's retail customers.[6] Bloomberg later linked the company's early growth in assets under management to its bank-partnership model, including its cooperation with ING Germany.[7] In 2017, Scalable Capital had become one of the fastest-growing robo-advisors worldwide.[8]

By May 2018, Bloomberg reported that the company had reached €1 billion in assets under management.[7] and had over 30,000 customers.[9] Starting in 2020, Scalable Capital expanded from wealth management and began offering brokerage.[10][11]

In early 2021, the company closed its direct-to-consumer UK service to focus on the German market.[12] At the time, Scalable was active in Germany and Austria and planned launches in France, Italy and Spain.[13] In November 2021, it acquired the ETF information portal justETF.[14][15]

In August 2022, the company announced that client assets had surpassed €10 billion.[16] In April 2024, ETF Stream reported that client assets had reached €20 billion and that the customer base had grown to more than one million.[17]

In December 2024, Scalable Capital and the Hanover Stock Exchange [de] launched the European Investor Exchange (EIX), a new electronic trading venue for retail investors, as part of the company's broader effort to bring more trading and custody functions onto its own infrastructure rather than relying entirely on external partners.[18][19] The move allowed Scalable to handle trading, clearing, settlement, and custody on one platform.[1][20]

In February 2025, Scalable Capital began offering eligible retail investors in Germany access to a BlackRock private equity fund.[21]

During the market turmoil in April 2025, the company recorded record trading volumes and fee income, although the Financial Times reported that users also experienced access delays. BaFin later said that the technical disruptions affecting investment service providers in April 2025 had prompted additional supervisory attention to broker resilience.[22][23]

In September 2025, the European Central Bank granted Scalable Capital a full banking license, allowing it to offer deposit-taking and lending services directly under the supervision of BaFin and the Bundesbank. The move reduced the company's reliance on partner banks and supported the transition from securities accounts previously held through Baader Bank to Scalable's own infrastructure.[24][19][25]

Funding rounds

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In 2017, BlackRock took a stake in Scalable Capital.[26] By 2018, the company had raised around €250 million across multiple financing rounds.[4] A 2018 financing round included money from BlackRock, HV Holtzbrinck Ventures and Tengelmann Ventures.[27][28]

In July 2020, Scalable Capital raised €50 million in a Series D round at a reported post-money valuation of about €400 million. Around the same time, it launched its online broker, expanding beyond automated wealth management.[29] In June 2021, Scalable Capital raised more than $180 million (€150 million) in a Series E funding round led by the technology company Tencent, pushing the company's valuation to about $1.4 billion and making it a unicorn.[30][13]

In December 2023, Scalable Capital raised another €60 million in an extension round led by Balderton Capital. TechCrunch reported that the financing was done at an unchanged $1.4 billion valuation.[31]

In June 2025, it became known that Scalable Capital had raised a total of around €155 million in a new financing round, including money from new backers Sofina and Noteus Partners. Existing investors Balderton Capital, Tencent, and HV Capital added fresh capital.[32][33] In total, Scalable Capital has raised more than €470 million in financing since it was founded (as of 2025), with the total valuation of the company being around €1.5 billion.[32][34][22] In 2025, the Financial Times reported that Scalable still held about half of the €300 million it had raised previously and was aiming for profitability by the following year.[22]

Company structure

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Managing directors are Erik Podzuweit and Florian Prucker, who are also the founders of the company, as well as Dirk Franzmeyer, Dirk Urmoneit, and Martin Krebs.[35][36] The largest shares in Scalable Capital are held by investors, including BlackRock. Founders Erik Podzuweit, Florian Prucker, Stefan Mittnik, and Adam French also hold shares (as of 2019).[37] As of 2025, Scalable Capital manages around €30 billion.[3][28] In 2025, the company had over 700 employees.[38]

Products and services

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Scalable Capital operates as a bank, segmented into a self-directed brokerage and an automated wealth management service. The company is active in Germany, Italy, Austria, France, Spain and the Netherlands.[39]

The Broker offering includes stocks, funds – including exchange-traded funds (ETFs) –, derivatives, cryptocurrencies, and private equity.[32] In 2025, the company launched the Scalable Capital ACWI ETF.[40] Trading is facilitated through a tiered pricing model that includes a basic free tier with individual transaction fees and a subscription model with unlimited trading on orders above a defined threshold for a monthly flat fee.[41] Automated savings plans allow for regular investments starting from a minimum of one euro.[42] Scalable Capital also operates the European Investor Exchange in partnership with Börse Hannover and acts as a market-maker, while also providing access to the gettex (Börse München) and Xetra (Deutsche Börse) trading venues for order execution.[1][41] The execution of savings plans for ETFs is free of charge.[43]

The company's wealth management arm, Scalable Wealth, includes automated portfolio management for passive investors. Upon registration, users receive suggestions based on user profiles, including risk tolerance, investment horizon, and sustainability preferences.[4][44] The offering includes multi-asset portfolios, portfolio monitoring, automatic rebalancing, and different investment strategies.[45][46] Scalable Capital also offers a children's investment account within the Scalable Broker account, where parents can independently select ETFs and stocks, as well as a children's account with Scalable Wealth.[47][48]

The full banking licence received in 2025 included permission from the European Central Bank (ECB) to conduct deposit and lending business, for example for consumer loans.[49][50]

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In October 2020, a data breach at a former service provider used by Scalable Capital exposed identity, tax and securities-account data. According to Handelsblatt, more than 33,000 people in Germany and the UK had been affected.[51] For comparison, TechCrunch reported in June 2021 that Scalable Capital had 250,000 customers.[52] In December 2021, the Munich I Regional Court awarded one claimant €2,500 in non-material damages and held that future material losses arising from the theft would also have to be compensated.[51]

The dispute later formed part of joined cases C-182/22 and C-189/22 before the Court of Justice of the European Union. In June 2024, the court clarified that compensation under Article 82 of the GDPR is not limited to cases where stolen personal data has already been used for identity theft or fraud. It also held, however, that a GDPR infringement alone does not automatically entitle a claimant to damages; actual non-material harm must still be shown.[53][54]

In February 2025, the Consumer Centre Baden-Württemberg issued a warning to Scalable Capital and Trade Republic over how they presented interest-bearing cash balances to customers.[55] The consumer group argued that the brokers' marketing was misleading because the advertised interest rate was variable, applied only to the portion of customer balances held as deposits, and did not make sufficiently clear when cash could instead be placed in money market funds, which were not covered by statutory deposit-protection schemes.[56][55]

See also

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References

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  3. 1 2 Ginsburg, Leo (2025-06-05). "Gründer von Scalable Capital: Ohne Besessenheit keine Spitzenleistung". WELT (in German). Retrieved 2026-03-24.
  4. 1 2 3 Daniel Hüfner (2017-07-04). "30 Millionen Dollar vom mächtigsten Mann der Wall Street? Dieser Gründer hat sie ergattert". t3n Magazin (in German). Retrieved 2025-12-17.
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  8. Jürgen Grosche (2017-11-24). "Mit guten Partnern auf erfolgreichem Kurs" (PDF). Rheinische Post (in German). p. E2. Retrieved 2025-12-18.
  9. "Erster Robo-Advisor sammelt mehr als eine Milliarde Euro Kundengelder ein". Handelsblatt (in German). 2018-05-29. Retrieved 2025-12-17.
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  22. 1 2 3 Arnold, Martin (2025-06-03). "BlackRock-backed fintech raises funds to be 'European Charles Schwab'". Financial Times. Retrieved 2026-03-24.
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  48. Julia Leonhardt (2025-10-09). "Warum die Frühstart-Rente jetzt für Streit sorgt". Wirtschaftswoche. Retrieved 2025-12-17.
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