Modulr receives investment from PayPal Ventures

OpenBankingExpo
19 Nov 2020

Modulr, a Payments as a Service API platform, has secured a £9 million investment from PayPal Ventures to develop additional products, grow its team and expand its customer base.

Modulr enables digital businesses and software platforms across lending, banking, fintech, travel, employment services and accounting to easily embed and build new payment products and services within their customer journey. With its full stack Payments as a Service API, it handles much of the complexities and regulatory overhead, so that its customers can focus on their own unique value proposition. Modulr’s direct access to the Bank of England facilitates the fast experience that digital customers demand.

Modulr is tapping into the massive business to business payments digitisation opportunity by working with platforms that serve small and medium-sized businesses. 2020 has been a breakout year for the company as it signed up a number of large enterprise customers, despite the macroeconomic challenges posed by COVID-19.

Anil Hansjee, partner at PayPal Ventures said: “More digital businesses are looking to incorporate payments into their existing user experience but either doesn’t have the expertise or the resources. Modulr is well-positioned to be an enabler of this trend and will undoubtedly expand end-user’s access to fast, reliable and secure financial services. We look forward to working with Modulr as it helps to power the next generation of digital businesses.”

Myles Stephenson, CEO of Modulr said: “This investment marks an important milestone for Modulr’s modern payments infrastructure. Modulr lowers the barriers to bringing payments into a platform, creating endless new possibilities for our customers while allowing them to focus on their core competencies. The investment from PayPal Ventures enhances our ability to execute on that vision.”

In total,  Modulr has raised £63.3 million including investments from PayPal Ventures, Highland Europe, Frog Capital, Blenheim Chalcot and a £10m grant from the Capability and Innovation Fund.