French Fintech Startup Lydia Raises 100 Million In Funding Round

Last updated: June 9, 2025, 04:59

French Fintech Startup Lydia Raises 100 Million In Funding Round

A report by TechCrunch has

French fintech Lydia raises $100 million in funding

La startup francesa de fintech Lydia recauda USD 100 millones en

A report by TechCrunch has indicated that Lydia has raised $100 million in its latest funding round (Series C), bringing the valuation of the French fintech super-app to over

Lydia

La startup francesa de tecnología financiera amigable con las criptomonedas, Lydia, ha recaudado USD 100 millones en una ronda de financiación de Serie C, según un

Lydia, France's answer to the fintech super-app, has raised $100 million in a Series C round, according to a report from TechCrunch. Existing investors Tencent and Accel alongside with

Lydia Gets $100 Million Funding, Now Valued at $1 Billion

French fintech super

French fintech super-app Lydia has raised $100 million in a Series C round, valuing the startup at over $1 billion.

Lydia raises over $100 million and becomes a French unicorn

French fintech Lydia raises $100 million in funding - AiCoin

French crypto

Its current accounts, joint accounts, credit, savings and now investment services have already attracted 2 million French people and are experiencing double digit

French crypto-friendly fintech startup Lydia has raised $100 million in a Series C funding round, per a report in TechCrunch. The latest capital raise reportedly helped Lydia

According to a report from TechCrunch, the fintech super app has raised $100 million in a round with existing investors such as Tencent, Accel, and Founders Future and

French fintech Lydia gets unicorn status after $100 million funding

French fintech startup Lydia raises $100 million in Series C funding

French Fintech Startup Lydia Raises $100 Million in Funding Round

French fintech startup

French fintech startup, Lydia, has announced that it has raised $100 million in a funding round. The Series C funding round was led by existing investors Accel and Tencent.