N26 vs. Wise — Which Is Better for Europeans in 2026?
Detailed comparison of N26 and Wise for European users: fees, currency exchange, card features, and which suits travelers, freelancers, and expats.
7 min czytaniaN26 vs. Wise — Which Is Better for Europeans in 2026?
N26 and Wise are both popular financial products for Europeans, but they serve fundamentally different purposes. N26 is a bank — it holds your money in a licensed banking entity with deposit protection. Wise is a financial technology company — it excels at multi-currency operations but is not a traditional bank. Understanding this distinction is the starting point for choosing between them.
Core Identity
N26 is a German-licensed bank. Your deposits are protected by the German deposit guarantee scheme up to 100,000 EUR. It offers a full banking experience: account, debit card, direct debits, standing orders, and (in some markets) credit products.
Wise (formerly TransferWise) is a payment institution authorized by the Financial Conduct Authority (UK) and regulated in the EU through its Belgian entity. Your money is held in segregated accounts at partner banks — not directly insured under standard deposit guarantee schemes, though Wise has additional safeguards. Its core strength is international money transfers and multi-currency accounts.
Account Types and Pricing
N26 Standard: Free. EUR account, Mastercard debit card, 3 free ATM withdrawals/month (Germany; varies by country), basic budgeting features.
N26 Smart: 4.90 EUR/month. 10 shared sub-accounts (Spaces), higher ATM allowance, choice of card color, premium customer support.
N26 You: 9.90 EUR/month. Travel insurance, purchase protection, fee-free foreign currency payments.
N26 Metal: 16.90 EUR/month. All of the above plus metal card, higher insurance coverage, dedicated phone support.
Wise Account: Free to open. No monthly fee. Multi-currency account holding 40+ currencies. Wise debit card: one-time fee of approximately 7–9 EUR.
The key difference: N26 charges monthly subscriptions for premium features. Wise has no monthly fee but charges per-transaction fees for currency conversion and transfers.
Currency Exchange
This is where Wise dominates.
Wise: Uses the mid-market exchange rate (the rate you see on Google) plus a small transparent fee. Typical total cost for EUR-to-PLN conversion: 0.40–0.60%. For EUR-to-USD: 0.35–0.55%. The fee is shown upfront before you confirm — no hidden margins.
N26: Uses Mastercard exchange rates for card payments abroad. Typical hidden margin: 0.5–1.7% above mid-market, depending on the currency pair. N26 You and Metal include fee-free foreign currency card payments, but the rate still includes a small Mastercard margin.
Example: spending 1,000 EUR worth of PLN on holiday:
- Wise card: approximately 1,005 EUR (0.5% fee) = 4,020 PLN received
- N26 Standard: approximately 1,017 EUR (1.7% margin) = 4,000 PLN received
- N26 You: approximately 1,005 EUR (Mastercard rate, no N26 fee) = 4,015 PLN received
For occasional travelers, the difference is small. For freelancers receiving payments in multiple currencies or expats moving money between countries monthly, Wise saves hundreds of euros per year.
International Transfers
Wise: Built for this. Send money to 70+ countries with transparent fees and mid-market rates. A 1,000 EUR transfer to a PLN account costs approximately 4–6 EUR total. Speed: 1–2 business days for most routes, sometimes instant.
N26: Standard SEPA transfers within the EU are free and instant. International transfers outside SEPA are possible but use traditional SWIFT routing — slower (2–5 days) and more expensive (fees from N26 plus intermediary bank fees, often 15–30 EUR total).
Verdict: Wise is dramatically better for non-SEPA international transfers. N26 is fine for intra-EU SEPA transfers.
Multi-Currency Features
Wise: Hold balances in 40+ currencies simultaneously. Receive money in 10+ currencies with local account details (EUR IBAN, USD routing number, GBP sort code, etc.). Convert between currencies at any time. This is Wise's core product and it is best-in-class.
N26: Single-currency EUR account. You cannot hold USD, PLN, or GBP balances within N26. Currency conversion happens only at the point of card payment or international transfer.
Verdict: Wise wins completely for multi-currency needs.
Daily Banking
N26: Full banking experience. Direct debits for bills, standing orders for rent, salary deposits, ATM withdrawals. The app includes spending insights, categorization, and sub-accounts (Spaces) for saving toward goals.
Wise: Limited daily banking. SEPA direct debits are supported. Standing orders are available. But Wise is not designed as a primary bank — it lacks features like overdraft, credit products, and the deep banking integrations that N26 offers.
Verdict: N26 is a better primary bank. Wise is a better secondary account for international operations.
Card Features
N26: Mastercard debit, contactless, Apple Pay and Google Pay, virtual card available. Free for Standard tier.
Wise: Visa or Mastercard debit (depends on region), contactless, Apple Pay and Google Pay. One-time card fee. The card automatically converts currency at mid-market rate when you pay in a foreign currency — choosing the cheapest currency from your balances.
Both cards work well for daily purchases. The Wise card's automatic currency selection is a standout feature for multi-currency users.
Security and Protection
N26: Full German banking license. Deposits protected up to 100,000 EUR by the Entschadigungseinrichtung deutscher Banken. This is the strongest consumer protection available.
Wise: Not a bank. Customer funds are held in segregated accounts at partner banks (primarily in low-risk government bonds and cash deposits). If Wise became insolvent, your money should be recoverable — but the protection mechanism is different and less tested than traditional deposit insurance.
Verdict: N26 offers stronger regulatory protection. For amounts over 10,000 EUR, this matters.
For Polish Users Specifically
N26 in Poland: Available. EUR account with German IBAN. Useful for Polish users who receive EUR income or travel frequently within the eurozone. Not practical as a primary account if most expenses are in PLN — you would pay conversion fees on every domestic transaction.
Wise in Poland: Fully available with PLN account details. You can hold PLN and send/receive PLN transfers. More practical for Polish users who handle multiple currencies.
Neither replaces a Polish bank for domestic needs — PLN mortgage payments, ZUS contributions, BLIK payments, and many domestic services expect a Polish bank account (mBank, PKO, ING, etc.).
The Combination Strategy
Many European users — especially freelancers, expats, and digital nomads — use both:
- Primary bank (N26 or local bank): Salary receipt, bills, daily expenses in home currency
- Wise: International transfers, multi-currency balances, foreign currency spending
This combination captures the strengths of each platform. Track all accounts in Freenance for a unified financial overview.
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