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Future Of European Banking: Tech Trends To Watch

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European banks are under pressure from all sides. Neobanks keep pulling customers. Regulators keep updating the rulebook. And the technology that was “experimental” three years ago is now quietly running in production. The question in 2026 isn’t whether banks should modernise, it’s how fast, in which direction, and who gets to set the pace. This piece looks at the technologies reshaping European banking right now: not the concepts, but the actual deployments, the real decisions, and the gaps that still need closing.

The market right now: From pilots to production

Here’s the thing about European banking in 202, it stopped being about “exploring digital transformation.” That chapter closed. What replaced it is messier and more interesting: the shift from controlled pilots to actual production systems, with all the friction that comes with it.

The benchmarks are telling. European banks are moving AI from innovation labs into frontline operations — credit risk, treasury, compliance monitoring, customer-facing interfaces. Not in every institution, and not cleanly. But the direction is clear.

Banks that have been quietly working with IT solutions for financial services, things like core system modernisation, API integration layers, and GRC tooling, are finding themselves better positioned than those that delayed. Legacy infrastructure isn’t just a cost centre anymore. It’s a competitive liability.

Still, readiness varies wildly. Some institutions (Deutsche Bank, ING, BNP Paribas) have been running AI-powered systems in customer service and fraud detection for years. Others are still on mainframes that predate the iPhone. That gap isn’t closing as fast as the headlines suggest.

What the numbers actually say

The AI market in banking is projected to hit around USD 45.6 billion in 2026, up from USD 26.2 billion in 2024. Impressive. But here’s the counterpoint: KPMG estimates that 99% of firms plan to deploy AI agents, while only 11% have actually done so. And 57% of organisations say they lack internal capabilities to make agentic AI work.

So the ambition is there. The execution is not keeping up.

Agentic AI: Beyond the chatbot era

Remember when every bank launched a chatbot and called it AI innovation? Those were simpler times. What’s happening now is different in kind, not just degree.

Agentic AI means systems that don’t just respond, they plan, execute, and iterate. A fraud detection bot that flags suspicious transactions is useful. An agentic system that can monitor activity, cross-reference regulatory databases, file a suspicious activity report, and alert a compliance officer, without a human in the loop for routine cases, is something else entirely.

Finastra’s Siobhan Byron described it plainly: the convergence of agentic AI, open ecosystems, and hyper-personalisation will define which institutions win in 2026 and beyond. Not who has the flashiest app. Who has the plumbing right.

What Banks Are Actually Deploying

  • Autonomous loan processing: pre-approval pipelines that handle document checks, identity verification, and risk scoring end-to-end
  • AI-assisted regulatory reporting: pulling transaction data, formatting it to EBA templates, and flagging anomalies before submission
  • Real-time fraud response systems: NatWest’s AI-driven approach, for example, reportedly cut new account fraud by 90% since 2019
  • AI-powered relationship management for corporate banking: surfacing insights from client transaction patterns to suggest products or flag churn risk

None of this is science fiction. All of it is live somewhere in Europe today.

The catch? The gap between deploying AI and deploying AI responsibly is enormous. The ECB stated clearly in early 2026 that it will focus supervisory attention on generative AI applications and third-party concentration risk. Banks that outsource too much of their AI infrastructure to a single vendor are storing up trouble.

Open banking grows up (finally)

PSD2 opened the doors. For a while, not much walked through them. Banks shared APIs because they had to, fintechs built dashboards, consumers were mildly confused. The infrastructure existed but the use cases were thin.

That’s changing.

Open finance means extending data sharing beyond payment accounts to investments, pensions, insurance, mortgages. Europe’s data portability frameworks are catching up to this reality, and the commercial logic is becoming clearer.

The embedded finance angle

Embedded finance is where this gets commercially interesting. Imagine a small business using accounting software — say, something built on Xero or Pennylane, that can offer a credit line directly in the workflow based on real revenue data. No branch visit. No PDF statements. Just an offer that appears when it’s actually useful.

This is already happening at the edges of European financial infrastructure. The platforms that get there first — whether banks or fintechs or tech companies, will own the customer relationship in ways traditional current accounts never could.

What’s required for this to work at scale:

  • Standardised, reliable APIs (the European Banking Authority is still pushing for this)
  • Robust consent management, GDPR compliance remains non-negotiable
  • Real-time data infrastructure, not batch processing
  • Cross-sector data agreements between financial institutions, insurers, and investment platforms

Banks that build modular, platform-based architectures now will find it far easier to plug into these ecosystems. Those still running monolithic core banking systems will need a translation layer at minimum and likely a serious modernisation programme before they can participate meaningfully.

The digital Euro: Real product or permanent pilot?

The European Central Bank has been working on a digital euro for years now. The timeline has shifted, the design has evolved, and the political conversation has gotten more complicated. But in 2026, it’s no longer a thought experiment.

The ECB’s digital euro project entered its preparation phase in late 2023. By 2026, we’re looking at a technically feasible system, the question is political and commercial, not engineering. Will member states align? Will banks resist? Will consumers actually want it?

Here’s the honest picture:

  • The ECB wants a digital euro that coexists with cash and commercial bank money
  • Commercial banks are nervous about disintermediation — if customers hold euros directly with the ECB, what happens to deposits?
  • Privacy concerns persist, particularly in Germany and Austria, where cash culture runs deep
  • Merchant adoption will be critical, and no one has solved the incentive problem elegantly yet

The digital euro isn’t going to replace existing payment infrastructure overnight. But it will force every bank in the eurozone to think carefully about where their payment business actually sits and how durable it is.

Cybersecurity and DORA: The compliance crunch

January 2025 was when DORA (Digital Operational Resilience Act) came into full force. By 2026, the European Banking Authority and national supervisors are knee-deep in assessing compliance, and what they’re finding is uncomfortable.

DORA isn’t just a checkbox regulation. It requires financial institutions to prove they can withstand, respond to, and recover from ICT-related disruptions. That means:

  • Threat-led penetration testing (TLPT): actual adversarial testing of critical systems, not just vulnerability scans
  • ICT third-party risk management: banks must monitor and audit their tech vendors, including cloud providers
  • Incident reporting timelines major incidents must be reported within hours, not days
  • Resilience testing operational continuity must be demonstrable, not assumed

The third-party risk element is where most banks are struggling. Cloud concentration is a real issue. If a bank’s core data infrastructure runs on AWS Frankfurt and AWS goes down, is that the bank’s problem or Amazon’s? Under DORA, it’s the bank’s problem. Full stop.

The ECB has signalled it will deepen its assessment of third-party dependencies throughout 2026, with particular attention to concentration in critical service providers. Expect enforcement actions.

What good looks like

Banks with mature operational resilience programs have already mapped their ICT dependencies, run TLPT exercises, and established documented response protocols. They’ve done the hard work of knowing where their critical functions run and what happens when those systems fail.

The institutions that treated DORA as a documentation exercise rather than an operational one are going to have a difficult few months.

Core banking modernisation: The long game

Nothing in European banking tech moves slower, or matters more, than core banking modernization. These are systems that process billions of euros daily — systems that some banks have been running, with patches and workarounds, for forty years.

Replacing them is expensive, risky, and politically difficult inside organisations. But running them indefinitely is becoming increasingly untenable.

Why it can’t wait

  • Legacy cores can’t support real-time payments without expensive middleware
  • They struggle to integrate with modern APIs at the speed open banking demands
  • Cloud migration is blocked or severely complicated by inflexible data structures
  • Talent to maintain COBOL-era systems is genuinely scarce and getting scarcer

The approaches banks are taking vary:

  • Full replacement — rare, high-risk, but the only path to genuine architectural freedom. TSB’s 2018 migration disaster in the UK is the cautionary tale every bank mentions in these conversations
  • Strangler fig pattern — gradually building new capabilities alongside the legacy core, routing traffic to new systems while the old one withers
  • Core banking SaaS platforms — vendors like Thought Machine (Vault), 10x Banking, and Mambu offer cloud-native cores designed for modern architectures; challenger banks are further along here than incumbents

DXC Technology’s Hogan platform, which underpins core banking for a number of institutions, has been introducing API microservices layers precisely to let banks modernise around existing infrastructure rather than ripping it out wholesale. It’s a pragmatic answer to an impossible question.

Payments infrastructure: real-time, cross-border, invisible

The payments space in Europe is genuinely exciting right now and not in the breathless startup sense. In the structural, plumbing-of-the-financial-system sense.

TARGET Instant Payment Settlement (TIPS) is operational. The SEPA Instant Credit Transfer scheme hit full-force mandatory implementation deadlines. Contactless, account-to-account, and request-to-pay are all mature. What’s next is the harder problem: cross-border real-time payments.

SWIFT’s GPI (Global Payments Innovation) moved things forward. But true, frictionless cross-border payments — the kind where a freelancer in Barcelona gets paid in real-time from a client in Singapore — still involves too many hops, too much FX friction, and too many correspondent banking relationships.

What’s being tested:

  • Interoperable instant payment systems across the EU and beyond
  • ISO 20022 migration — the messaging standard that makes all of this actually work at scale, now being adopted across SEPA, SWIFT, and domestic clearing systems
  • Central bank digital currency pilots connecting European and Asian systems for wholesale cross-border settlement
  • Stablecoin rails for treasury and B2B payments — JPMorgan’s Onyx, Société Générale’s SG-FORGE project

None of these are finished. All of them are actively moving.

Personalisation and the CX Gap

European consumers expect their bank to behave more like Spotify and less like a government department. Personalised insights, proactive alerts, relevant product suggestions at the right moment. Not a generic push notification about “checking your finances.”

The technology to do this exists. Most banks have some of it. The challenge is:

  1. Data fragmentation — customer data sits in dozens of siloed systems; building a unified view is a multi-year programme
  2. Consent and privacy — GDPR limits how behavioural data can be used without explicit opt-in
  3. Organisational inertia — product teams, tech teams, and compliance teams rarely move at the same speed

Neobanks (Monzo, N26, Revolut) have structural advantages here. They were built on unified data models from day one. No legacy. No siloes. When Revolut adds a feature, it appears for all 45+ million users within weeks.

Traditional banks are trying to replicate this. Some are getting there. Most are still stuck in the planning phase, dealing with procurement cycles and change management programmes that add years to every initiative.

What 2026 is actually testing

Pull back for a moment. What’s really being stress-tested in European banking right now?

It’s not any single technology. It’s the capacity of large, complex, regulated institutions to change fast enough to stay relevant — while also being stable enough to be trusted.

That’s a genuine tension. The banks that figure out how to hold both of those things at once (agility and resilience, innovation and reliability) are the ones that will define the next decade of European financial services.

The technology trends described here are not independent. Open banking feeds into embedded finance. Core modernisation unlocks real-time payments. Agentic AI only works if the data infrastructure is clean and the governance frameworks are in place. DORA compliance is only achievable if the tech architecture is understood in the first place.

It all connects. The banks that see this as a system are the ones making actual progress.

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12 Drunk Yobs Turn Gatwick To Tenerife EasyJet Flight Into Four And A Half Hour Nightmare

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Gatwick to Tenerife Sur flight arrives. Credit: Lapa Smile – Shutterstock

Holidaymakers flew terrified for four and a half hours as the crew battled chaos at 30,000 ft before a priority touchdown at Tenerife South was granted.

Frightened passengers went through a terrifying ordeal on an easyJet flight from London Gatwick to Tenerife South when 12 disruptive men turned the journey into a scene of airborne mayhem on June 11. The cabin crew raised the alarm mid-flight, leading to Spanish air traffic controllers granting urgent priority landing clearance to get the Airbus A321 safely on the ground as fast as possible. Police teams raced to meet the aircraft at Tenerife South Airport and one by one removed the troublemakers.

Por docenas! 🤬
La tripulación del vuelo procedente de Gatwick llegando a #Tenerife Sur nos comunica que llevan 12 pasajeros conflictivos a bordo.
Solicitan presencia policial a su llegada. Les recortamos la maniobra en lo posible. Aterrizan sin incidencias.
Todo nuestro apoyo… pic.twitter.com/wkpBT2WPL0

— 😉Controladores Aéreos 🇪🇸 (@controladores) June 11, 2026

The crew contacted control towers directly after the group caused serious disturbance onboard. Controllers shortened the approach dramatically to minimise risks to everyone else on board. The plane touched down without further incident, but the episode has left travellers demanding stronger action against repeat offenders who ruin holidays for families and couples.

Crew act fast as tensions boil over

EasyJet later confirmed that officers met flight EZY8035 on arrival because of the group’s behaviour. A spokesperson stressed that cabin crew are trained to handle these situations quickly and that safety remains the top priority. No arrests were confirmed in initial reports, but passengers described the atmosphere as deeply unsettling.

This latest case adds to a growing pattern of alcohol-fuelled disruption on UK flights heading to the Canary Islands. Many incidents link directly to excessive drinking before or during flights, leaving crews and fellow passengers to deal with aggressive or unruly behaviour.

Passengers and experts demand tougher crackdowns

Social media has erupted with calls for immediate and lasting punishment. One X user wrote, “Just kick all of them off the plane and put them on the no-fly list. It’s the only way to stop this behaviour because it’s disrupting and tiring for everybody else.”

Another posted: “The only way to address these people is for ALL airlines to ban them from flying on any flight for a year. This goes for those that get drunk or abusive to airline staff.”

Airlines, including easyJet and Jet2, have already lobbied the UK Civil Aviation Authority for a centralised database that would blacklist disruptive passengers across all carriers. Supporters argue this would prevent offenders simply switching airlines after being banned by one company.

Tenerife tourism at risk from repeat offenders

Local tourism leaders in Tenerife fear these repeated incidents damage the island’s reputation as a safe family destination. Police presence at the gate sends a strong message, yet many holidaymakers want offenders to face instant fines, immediate deportation, or permanent travel bans. Experts warn that without harsher deterrents, the problem will continue to escalate during peak summer months.

EasyJet and other carriers continue to train staff and work with authorities, but passengers say more must be done at check-in and before boarding to stop drunk passengers from ever reaching the gate. One thing is clear after this latest Tenerife scare: the days of turning a blind eye to drunken yobs in the skies may finally be coming to an end.

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Brits Reveal What’s Strange Visiting The UK

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You’ve made the move to live in Spain. You are now in the groove of how life works. You know where to go, what to do, and how to get things done. Whether you’ve been away for a short time or the majority of your life, returning to the UK can bring some surprising feelings.

So, what do British residents across Spain find most alien when they visit their home country?  Leaving aside the usual answers like “the weather” or “the cost of living,” a few specific themes came up repeatedly, some good, some bad, and some things that were originally taken for granted.

Desperately early dining times

One of the most common readjustments is the eating schedule. After adapting to Spain’s famously late calendar, many find themselves completely out of sync with the British timetable when meeting friends and family back home for a meal.

“What I find strange about visiting the UK now is the eating hours. I could never eat dinner at seven in the evening,” says Molly, who moved to Seville. “Also, not getting tapas with my beer. I always end up peckish and having to look for food elsewhere, especially as many pubs stop serving food after a certain time.”

In Spain, where dinner is often enjoyed between 9pm and 11pm (especially during the hot summer months), eating at 6pm or 7pm can feel surprisingly rushed.

Carpeted floors and bathroom habits

Sometimes the smallest household details cause the biggest reverse culture shock. For one, British homes suddenly seem surprisingly carpet-heavy. After years of living with ceramic or tiled flooring, common in Spain to keep homes cool, stepping back onto wall-to-wall carpet can feel oddly unfamiliar.

Then there is the bathroom. For those who have fully embraced the Spanish bidet, returning to a purely toilet-paper-based routine feels like a step backward. While not every modern Spanish home has one, bidets remain far more common in Spain than in the UK for reasons of hygiene and comfort.

A rushed lifestyle and social stress

Many returning Brits are struck by a shift in atmosphere rather than physical objects. Britain is often described as strangely pressured, anxious, and hurried, with people burdened by the rising cost of living.

“Everything in the UK seems more aggressive these days. Even the supermarket pricing!” says Ruth from Nerja.

Some find the increase in visible homelessness and social stress in the UK particularly apparent. After becoming accustomed to the relaxed, outdoor lifestyle of Spanish towns, many report being struck by the number of rough sleepers and the sense that certain high streets appear more run-down than they remember.

Navigating British roads

Driving on the left again requires a brief mental reset. “It feels strange being on the opposite side of the road now, even though I’ve driven in the UK for longer,” says Rachel, Granada.

Heavier traffic, busier roads, and navigating complex British roundabouts earned specific mentions, making driving in Britain feel far more hectic than expats remember it.

The winter darkness

“How early it gets dark, and the sky just feels lower.”

The UK’s northern latitude means winter daylight hours shrink far more dramatically than they do in southern Spain. While Andalucía enjoys substantial sunshine and clear skies throughout the winter, the UK gloom can be tough to handle. Hand-in-hand with the darkness comes the physical weight of returning home, expats noted how odd it felt to suddenly need heavy coats, gloves, and scarves just to go outside.

Food culture

Food comes up over and over again, but not just because of the schedule. One respondent noted that what stood out most was “the sheer volume of junk food and processed snacks wherever you go.”

Research supports this observation. Studies consistently show the UK has one of the highest levels of ultra-processed food consumption in Europe. Others felt that people generally appeared less healthy than they remembered, though they acknowledged these perceptions are subjective and heavily influenced by the Mediterranean lifestyle shift.

The Best of British

There is still so much genuinely appreciated about returning to the UK.

“You can get everything you need in one supermarket,” says Rachel, who also praised Britain’s urban development, vibrant street cafes, and international influences. For another respondent, one specific British institution stood above all others, “Marks & Spencer Foodhall. I could spend hours there.”

Public transport availability was another frequently mentioned positive, alongside the sheer scale of cultural opportunities. “I want to go back there to study. There’s so much more happening in London,” says Sophie from Madrid.

A shift in time

Perhaps the most thought-provoking observation came from Adam in Malaga, who perfectly summarized how a country can change while you are away.

“I came to Spain 27 years ago and commented to a friend that everything felt 20 years behind the UK. Now I return to London and it’s the other way around. It makes me feel sad.”

What do you think?

Does having to drink a full pint feel strange to you now rather than just having a small caña? Do you find it weird that you can’t just tear a single can out of a six-pack at the supermarket like you can in Spain? Alien that you can just leave your rubbish directly out the front of your house? The list goes on.

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Brit Couple Sentenced After Abandoning Young Children At Benalmadena Resort

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Benalmadena’s Holiday World resort. Credit: JL YouTube

A British couple have received a one-year-and-four-month prison term for leaving their three young children unsupervised at a Spanish holiday resort.

Court imposes suspended sentence and contact ban

Judicial authorities in Torremolinos announced the agreement on Friday, June 12. The judge suspended actual imprisonment provided the couple commits no further offences over two years. Other restrictions imposed prevent them from exercising parental authority for two years and eight months. They must also stay at least 500 metres away from the children during that period.

Two of the youngsters tested positive for cocaine during medical checks at Malaga’s Maternal and Infant Hospital. All three will now stay in the care of Andalucia social services. Officials plan to coordinate with the British consulate for their return to the UK.

Discovery at Holiday World Resort pool area

Staff and guests spotted the children, aged six months, one year, and four years, wandering in the common zones and pool areas of the all-inclusive Holiday World Resort. Witnesses reported the toddlers appeared to have spent considerable time without any adult supervision. Some showed signs of sunburn.

National Police officers arrived quickly and found the parents drinking at a nearby location within the complex. After interviewing witnesses and completing enquiries, authorities arrested both adults on suspicion of child abandonment. Medical teams transferred the children to hospital for full assessments.

Long-term measures apply nationwide

This ruling carries a compulsory enforcement across all locations. Social services are looking after the children’s welfare until arrangements for their relocation conclude. The case has drawn attention to parental duties during overseas holidays and the quick response from local emergency teams.

The incident took place when concerned visitors alerted resort personnel about the unattended minors near the pools. Officers acted quickly to locate the parents and to guarantee the children’s safety. Medical results confirmed substance exposure in the two youngest, which led to immediate protective steps being taken.

Authorities continue to prioritise the minors’ wellbeing while preparing their transfer home.

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