Fintech App Development Cost in the UK 2026

Last updated: 24 April 2026Region: United KingdomData source: MyAppTemplates.com analysis of 2026 public SOW benchmarks and shipped-app case studies

Executive Summary

Fintech is the most expensive app category to build in the UK, and most of that cost sits outside of software. A mid-market London or Manchester agency quoting £60k–£180k for a fintech MVP is quoting the software scope only. FCA authorisation (direct or via an agent/EMD route), Consumer Duty obligations, a Plaid or TrueLayer Open Banking contract, KYC (Onfido/Persona), and PCI DSS scoping all sit on top — typically £40k–£150k more before you take a single customer.

The boilerplate side of this page is narrow and honest. MyAppTemplates is £199 one-time (billed in USD as $199, roughly £158 at current rates, plus 20% VAT for UK buyers) and it removes Week 1: JWT auth, phone OTP, D1/Drizzle schema, Stripe adapter for subscription billing, Cloudflare Workers runtime, CI/CD, Sentry, and AI-agent tooling. It does not give you FCA approval, a banking partner, Plaid, KYC, or a ledger. It gives you a working codebase on which Claude Code can build those integrations faster.

Every row in the table below prices the software build only. Where compliance or licensing dominates, the row is flagged — because those costs hit DIY and agency builders equally, and pretending otherwise would be dishonest.

Data

UK Fintech App Build Costs by Scope

Mid-market UK agency quotes vs DIY with Claude Code, priced in GBP (software scope only).

Every DIY build starts with the same flat boilerplate fee:$199 one-time (≈£158 + VAT) — column below shows marginal Claude Code API spend on top
#ScopeCategoryUK Agency Quote+ AI SpendSavingsBuild Time
1Personal budgeting appManual entry, categories, chartsConsumer PFM£18k–£32k£5599.7%3–4 days
2Subscription trackerDetect recurring charges, alert on renewalsConsumer PFM£22k–£38k£7099.7%4 days
3Expense splitter (Splitwise-style)Groups, balances, settle-up linksConsumer PFM£25k–£45k£9099.6%5 days
4Invoicing app for sole tradersVAT-aware invoices, PDF export, Stripe pay-linksSMB fintech£30k–£55k£12099.6%6–7 days
5Read-only Open Banking dashboardTrueLayer/Plaid AIS, account aggregation, no paymentsOpen Banking£40k–£75k£18099.5%9–10 days
6Savings goals appGoals, round-ups logic, read-only bank syncOpen Banking£35k–£65k£16099.5%8 days
7SME cash-flow forecasterXero/QuickBooks sync, 13-week projectionSMB fintech£45k–£80k£20099.5%10 days
8Crypto portfolio trackerRead-only exchange APIs, price feeds, P&LCrypto (read-only)£50k–£90k£22099.5%10–12 days
9Investment education + model portfoliosContent, mock trades, no real executionWealth (non-regulated)£40k–£75k£18099.5%9 days
10Buy-now-pay-later clone (merchant-side)Checkout widget, repayment schedule, Stripe collectionPayments£60k–£110k£260Credit-gated2 weeks
11Peer-to-peer payments (Monzo/Revolut-style)Banking-as-a-Service partner, internal ledger, FPS outNeobank-lite£90k–£160k£550FCA-gated3–4 weeks
12Open Banking payments (PIS)TrueLayer Payments, SCA, webhook reconciliationOpen Banking£70k–£120k£320FCA-gated2–3 weeks
13Invoice factoring marketplaceSME uploads, investor matching, Stripe Connect payoutsLending marketplace£110k–£180k£650FCA-gated4–5 weeks
14Robo-advisor (ISA/GIA wrappers)Risk profiling, portfolio rebalancing, platform custody partnerRegulated wealth£130k–£200k£700FCA-gated4–5 weeks
15Challenger bank (full current account)BaaS partner, cards, FSCS eligibility, Consumer DutyNeobank£180k–£250k+£800Banking-licence-gated6+ weeks
16Crypto exchange / custodial walletCustody partner, Travel Rule, MLR registrationCrypto (custodial)£150k–£240k£750FCA-MLR-gated5–6 weeks

1. What UK agencies are actually quoting in 2026

London day rates from reputable mid-market shops (not Shoreditch celebrity studios) run £750–£1,100 for mid-level engineers and £1,100–£1,600 for senior / lead. Manchester, Bristol, Edinburgh, and Leeds agencies come in roughly 15–25% lower. A typical fintech MVP team is a PM, a designer, an iOS/Android or RN engineer, a backend engineer, and a fractional tech lead — and fintech almost always adds a compliance reviewer for an extra £8k–£20k on the SOW.

Spotlight Quote

Open Banking dashboard, London mid-market agency

Discovery & design£14k2 weeks, PM + designer
Backend (Hono/Node + TrueLayer AIS)£22k4 weeks, 1 senior
Mobile (React Native, iOS + Android)£20k4 weeks, 1 mid
QA, DevOps, compliance review£9kspread across engagement
Agency total (ex VAT)£65k+ 20% VAT if you can't reclaim
Spotlight Quote

Same scope, DIY with MyAppTemplates + Claude Code

Boilerplate$199 (≈£158)one-time, lifetime updates
Claude Code API spend≈£180AIS adapter, dashboard UI, reconciliation
TrueLayer / Plaid contract£0–£500/moexternal — hits agency builds identically
Your time9–10 daysfounder-led, full-time
Software-scope total≈£340vs £65k — ~99.5% lower

2. What the boilerplate does (and firmly doesn't) for fintech

Being precise here matters more than for any other category, because fintech buyers will open the repo and check. What's included: JWT auth, phone OTP flow, rate-limited endpoints, a Stripe subscriptions adapter (for charging users to use your fintech app, not for moving their money), D1 + Drizzle, Cloudflare Workers runtime, RN + Expo mobile shell, Sentry, CI, and AI-agent tooling (AGENTS.md, CLAUDE.md, @backend-dev / @mobile-dev subagents, slash commands like /new-feature). What is not included: FCA permissions, Open Banking integrations, Plaid/TrueLayer, Onfido/Persona KYC, a ledger, Stripe Connect for payouts, card-issuing, or HMRC/VAT-aware invoicing. Those are integrations you (or Claude Code) wire against the boilerplate's adapter pattern and rate-limited Workers endpoints.

Spotlight Build

Wiring TrueLayer AIS against the boilerplate

What exists on day zeroHono routes, JWT sessions, Drizzle schema, rate limiting, Sentry
What you buildTrueLayer OAuth redirect, consent storage, account/transaction sync, webhook handler
How Claude Code helpsRun /new-feature open-banking-ais with the @backend-dev subagent — it scaffolds the route module, schema additions, and token-refresh cron against the existing patterns.
Realistic time2–3 daysvs ~3 weeks from scratch

3. The bit agencies price correctly and DIY can't dodge

FCA authorisation is the honest differentiator. If you're moving money, taking deposits, issuing credit, arranging investments, or custodying crypto, you need permissions — directly or via an Agent / EMD umbrella (Modulr, Railsr, Griffin) or a principal firm. That process is legal and operational work, not software: expect £15k–£60k in legal fees, 3–9 months elapsed time, and a compliance officer on your cap table or retainer. Consumer Duty (FCA PS22/9) adds ongoing fair-value and outcomes-monitoring obligations. A UK agency charging £150k for a neobank MVP is often including some of this compliance scaffolding in the quote — and it's genuinely worth paying for if you don't have a financial-services background. DIY is the right call for non-regulated fintech (PFM, tracking, invoicing, education, crypto read-only). It is not the right call for a challenger bank.

Decision Guide

When DIY + boilerplate is the right route

Good fitPFM, budgeting, subscription tracking, invoicing, SME dashboards, crypto read-only, investment education, expense splitting
Workable with careOpen Banking AIS (read-only), Open Banking PIS via a licensed TPP, BNPL merchant-side if you partner with a lender
Hire an agency or regulated partner insteadChallenger banks, custodial crypto, regulated wealth, consumer lending, card-issuing programmes

Building a UK Open Banking app in 10 days with the boilerplate

A realistic founder-led schedule for a read-only Open Banking dashboard — the sweet-spot scope for UK DIY fintech.

1
Day 1 — Clone, deploy, brand
Fork the boilerplate, set up Cloudflare, deploy to Workers, run `wrangler deploy`. Rename, swap theme colours, point the Expo app at your backend. Auth (JWT + phone OTP) works end-to-end by lunch.
2
Days 2–3 — TrueLayer AIS integration
Open a TrueLayer sandbox account. Run `/new-feature open-banking` with `@backend-dev`. It scaffolds OAuth redirect routes, a `connections` table in Drizzle, and a token-refresh Worker cron against the existing patterns.
3
Days 4–6 — Account + transaction sync
Build the sync job: pull accounts and transactions, store in D1, categorise. Add the mobile screens (accounts list, transaction feed, category pie) using the existing tab navigation and theme system.
4
Days 7–8 — Paywall + onboarding
The boilerplate already ships a paywall screen and Stripe subscription adapter. Wire your subscription SKU, set entitlements, and enable the free trial. Customise the onboarding screen for your Open Banking consent UX.
5
Days 9–10 — QA, privacy, submission
Write a DPIA (your Open Banking consent means you're a data controller), wire Sentry alerts, write App Store / Play Store listings, submit. Keep a compliance lawyer on retainer for the consent copy review — £500–£1,500 well spent.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need FCA authorisation for every UK fintech app?
No. Read-only PFM apps, invoicing, crypto price trackers, and education apps generally don't need FCA permissions. You need permissions the moment you move money, take deposits, issue credit, arrange investments, or custody crypto. When in doubt, speak to a fintech lawyer — £500 of legal time up front saves six-figure mistakes later.
How does the £199 boilerplate fee work for UK buyers?
The boilerplate is priced at $199 USD (roughly £158 at current rates). UK buyers pay 20% VAT on top if they're consumers; VAT-registered businesses reclaim it. It's a one-time purchase with lifetime updates — no retainer, no seat licences.
Can the boilerplate handle Stripe payouts to UK sellers or drivers?
Not out of the box. The billing abstraction accepts Stripe Connect as an adapter, but the Connect integration itself (Express accounts, 1099/SA302-equivalent reporting, payout schedules) is your build. Claude Code with the `@backend-dev` subagent wires it in about a day against the existing Stripe subscription adapter.
Why are UK agency quotes for fintech so much higher than, say, retail apps?
Three reasons: (1) compliance review time is real billable work, (2) fintech agencies carry higher PI insurance which flows into day rates, and (3) fintech engineers who understand SCA, Open Banking, and ledger design command premium rates. A £60k Open Banking quote from a solid Manchester shop is fair — it's not an up-sell.
What about TrueLayer vs Plaid in the UK?
TrueLayer is UK-native and generally cheaper for UK-only apps (free tier up to a point, then volume pricing). Plaid has better coverage if you want EU or US expansion. Both integrate cleanly against the boilerplate's Hono routes — the code difference is small.
Is Claude Code safe to use on regulated financial code?
It's a tool, and like any tool the output needs review. For FCA-authorised firms, a human engineer must sign off on anything touching customer funds, ledgers, or KYC decisions — this is true whether the code was written by Claude Code, a contractor, or a full-time hire. The boilerplate's test scaffolding and CI help enforce that review discipline.
Can I use the boilerplate as an agency building for UK clients?
Yes — the Agency tier ($299) is licensed for client work. Most agencies using it keep the same £60k–£100k quote to clients and absorb the saved time as margin, which is the honest economics of a boilerplate: it's not about lowering your invoice, it's about shipping in 6 weeks instead of 14.

UK fintech costs are two bills: software and licence. Only one of them is going down.

The software bill for UK fintech has collapsed. A £65k Open Banking dashboard quote is still honest work, but a founder with the boilerplate and Claude Code can ship the same scope for roughly £340 of marginal cost over 10 days. The compliance bill hasn't moved — and if you're building something regulated, that's where your money should go.

See what the boilerplate already covers
One-time $199 fee (≈£158 + VAT). Lifetime updates. No retainer.