The news: SoFi reported its first $1 billion quarter. In Q4, the company added 1 million customers, totaling 13.7 million, amid $1.03 billion in net revenue. Personal loans stood out: Originations rose 46% in Q4 2025 YoY to reach $7.5 billion, more than 70% of its total loan originations.
Zoom out: SoFi CEO Anthony Noto weighed in on President Trump’s proposal to cap credit card interest rates at 10%. He said a rate cap could push borrowers away from credit cards and toward personal loans, which would benefit SoFi as it filled the credit gap.
SoFi has positioned itself as a one-stop shop for consumer financial services, with checking and savings accounts, self-directed trading and roboadvisory, credit cards, personal and home equity loans, and mortgages. It is also an infrastructure provider and sponsor bank. Consumer investment offerings include increasing access to alternative assets, including real estate, private credit, crypto, and venture capital.
- SoFi launched the SoFiUSD stablecoin in December on the Ethereum blockchain. The company said it would provide infrastructure that lets other banks and fintechs issue white-label stablecoins interoperable with SoFiUSD.
- Also in December, it released the SoFi Smart Card, a secured charge card only available to SoFi Plus members. The card has no fee, but membership costs $10 per month.
- SoFi relaunched its crypto investing platform and introduced a blockchain-enabled remittance product. It claimed to be the first nationally chartered bank to launch consumer crypto trading.
Implications for banks: SoFi has grown from a fintech into a sizable financial institution (FI). It recently reported $41.2 billion in total assets, comparable to a midtier regional bank. At the same time, it is more of a mega-fintech with a banking license than a licensed traditional bank with fintech business interests.
Its crypto and infrastructure businesses are starkly different from what most FIs offer, and its in-house technology platforms make it more nimble. As a digital-only bank, SoFi doesn’t have the same curb appeal as traditional competitors. But it’s a blueprint for digital banking that competitors would be wise to consider.