Fintech Farm launches its new neobank in Uzbekistan
Fintech Farm, a startup founded by three Ukrainians, including monobank co-founder Dmytro Dubilet, has launched a neobank called Tezbank. The company currently has neobanks in five countries.
Fintech Farm, a startup founded by three Ukrainians, including monobank co-founder Dmytro Dubilet, has launched a neobank called Tezbank. The company currently has neobanks in five countries.
Fintech Farm, a startup founded by three Ukrainians, including monobank co-founder Dmytro Dubilet, has launched a neobank called Tezbank. The company currently has neobanks in five countries.
Fintech Farm launched the Tezbank mobile banking service together with Uzbek Hamkorbank.
«Tezbank has no branches. We don’t spend money on rent, collection, and a huge staff. Instead, we invest resources in an innovative application and personal customer support that really helps,» the announcement for the Uzbekistan market says.
Tezbank offers customers free cards with a credit limit of up to 50,000 soums and cashback of up to 10%. The neobank’s application also allows you to set reactions to transactions, send greeting cards, make payment distributions, and a function that allows you to shake your smartphone to pay without entering card details.
As a reminder, Fintech Farm aims to build a leading neobank in over 50 countries. They have already launched in four countries and plan to enter the markets of two more countries this year, one of which could be Morocco.

Last fall, Fintech Farm launched a neobank, Simbank, in Kyrgyzstan, and in the spring of 2025, it launched a beta test of its new product, Roarbank, in the Indian market. The company’s products are also available in Azerbaijan and Vietnam.
The company previously decided to close its project in Nigeria under the Fibo brand. It operated under its own financial license and issued cards in a limited partnership with Providus Bank.
Fintech Farm is currently expanding its team and has opened 40 new vacancies: IT, business areas, and marketing.



