Klarna is bringing a savings product that already has over $12.3 billion in European deposits to the U.S., putting a high-yield account inside the same app Americans use for payments and shopping finance.
The company launched Klarna Savings in the U.S. on Tuesday, June 9, with FDIC-insured accounts provided and held by WebBank, member FDIC, according to PYMNTS. The accounts have no minimum deposit, no monthly fees, support direct deposit, and currently offer interest rates above 3% APY.
Klarna puts a savings account inside its US shopping app
The move pushes Klarna further beyond its best-known lane: buy now, pay later and checkout financing. Savings now sits inside the Klarna app, giving the company another everyday financial touchpoint after purchase decisions are already made.
Klarna said the accounts include built-in tools such as round-ups, scheduled transfers, and savings goals. Those features are designed to make saving automatic inside an app that already handles consumer spending activity.
The company announcement carried more detail on the rate structure. APYs starting at 3.28% APY were accurate as of June 9, 2026, and are subject to change, with a membership requirement for the APY boost. The boosted rate applies to balances up to $50,000, while excess balances earn the base rate.
Klarna also stresses that the deposits are not held by Klarna itself. They are held at WebBank, and Klarna is not an FDIC-insured bank. Deposit insurance covers the failure of WebBank, with pass-through coverage available if required conditions are met.
That distinction matters. Klarna is selling the experience through its app, but the insured deposit relationship runs through WebBank.
“The average American earns less than half a percent on their savings, not because better options don’t exist, but because their bank hasn’t had to compete,” Klarna Co-Founder and CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski said. “Klarna is already where millions of Americans manage their everyday spending. Now it’s where they save too.”
The deposit push gives Klarna more than a new product tab
Klarna Savings is already live in Europe, where consumers have placed over $12.3 billion in deposits across 11 markets, the company said. The U.S. launch brings that playbook into a market where Klarna wants deeper engagement than occasional checkout use.
The product fits a broader shift inside Klarna. PYMNTS reported in May that deposits, debit usage, and point-of-sale financing have become more central to the company’s growth story.
Siemiatkowski said on a May earnings call that 91% of Klarna’s funding base now comes from consumer deposits, with an average duration of 270 days. His framing was blunt:
“Everyday spend feeds the deposits. Deposits fund the originations,” Siemiatkowski said.
That line explains the strategy better than the product copy. Klarna wants spending, savings, debit, and financing to reinforce each other inside one account relationship.
| Klarna product layer | Role in the app |
|---|---|
| Klarna Savings | Holds deposits, pays above 3% APY, adds savings tools |
| Klarna balance | Sits in the company’s financial hub |
| Klarna Card | Lets customers spend funds and spread certain purchases |
| Point-of-sale financing | Keeps Klarna tied to checkout and larger purchases |
XOOMAR analysis: the savings account is not just an interest-rate offer. It’s a retention tool. A customer who parks cash, receives direct deposits, and sets savings goals inside Klarna has more reasons to open the app outside a retail transaction.
Banks now face a sharper Klarna pitch: APY, no fees, no minimums
The direct target is clear from Siemiatkowski’s quote: banks that pay low savings rates because their customers haven’t moved. Klarna is using yield and app convenience to challenge that inertia.
The account’s no minimum deposit and no monthly fee structure lowers the barrier for users who don’t want to commit a large balance before testing the product. Direct deposit adds another layer, because it nudges the account closer to everyday banking rather than a side pocket for idle cash.
Klarna is also bundling the savings account with products it has already scaled. In March, the company said the Klarna Card reached 5 million customers. The card draws from customer funds for day-to-day spending and gives users the option to spread the cost of specific purchases, including travel or major appliances, without taking on long-term debt obligations.
At the time, Klarna Chief Marketing Officer David Sandström described the customer pitch this way:
“[Consumers are] voting with their wallets and looking for the control and flexibility in a single card,” Sandström said. “Unlike traditional banks, Klarna gives people the choice to pay now, or pay over time: the right tool for each situation.”
That same message now extends to savings. Klarna wants users to see the app as a place to hold money, spend money, and finance purchases.
The harder test is trust, not product design
The account specs are straightforward. The strategic question is harder: can Klarna convert a payments audience into a savings audience at meaningful scale in the U.S.?
XOOMAR analysis: Klarna has brand recognition in checkout and flexible payments, but savings requires a different kind of customer confidence. Users may be comfortable using Klarna for a purchase decision, yet still treat a primary savings balance more cautiously.
The WebBank structure helps answer the insurance question, but it also creates a messaging challenge. Klarna has to make clear where deposits sit, what FDIC protection covers, and how the APY conditions work. Confusion there would undercut the simplicity the product is trying to sell.
Rate durability is another watch item. Klarna says the APY is subject to change. If the headline yield drops, the account will need to compete more on app utility, direct deposit, savings tools, and its connection to Klarna’s spending products.
For now, Klarna has made its U.S. banking ambitions harder to ignore. The next signal will be whether customers use Klarna Savings as a casual high-yield parking spot, or start treating the app as part of their primary financial life.
Disclaimer: This XOOMAR analysis is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial, investment, legal, tax, or professional advice. It does not provide buy, sell, hold, price-target, portfolio, or personalized recommendations. Verify information independently and consult qualified professionals before making decisions.
The Bottom Line
- Klarna is expanding from buy now, pay later into everyday banking-style services.
- A 3.28% APY could attract consumers earning far less on traditional savings balances.
- The WebBank partnership highlights how fintech apps can offer bank-like products without being banks themselves.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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