Embedded finance in B2B: Opportunities and challenges in 2025
Embedded finance is no longer a B2C phenomenon. In B2B, it’s steadily reshaping how companies handle payments, issue cards, and manage financial operations — often without redirecting users outside their core platforms. What once required a bank visit or third-party integration now fits into a few API calls.
Use cases for embedded finance in B2B are becoming more defined. SaaS platforms and digital marketplaces now integrate payments, invoicing, and credit directly into their workflows — reducing friction for end users and shortening time-to-cash. For international platforms, tools like virtual IBANs or digital debit cards help manage global transactions without adding operational layers. Beyond efficiency, embedded models offer new revenue channels and keep clients within a single ecosystem longer.
But the technical and legal burden is hard to ignore. In cross-border environments, even something as basic as setting up a virtual IBAN or enabling swift transfers can trigger regulatory reviews, onboarding delays, or infrastructure revisions. Security expectations are growing, and platforms must scale fast — without overlooking compliance.
To navigate these hurdles, many digital-first companies look beyond traditional infrastructure. Some turn to authorised financial institutions that offer modular services tailored to international setups — from handling virtual IBAN accounts to supporting swift money transfers across jurisdictions. Bivial, regulated by FINMA under the Swiss Federal Banking Act, works with firms that operate globally, including those with complex shareholder structures or atypical business models. Its tools help streamline global payments and simplify operational workflows, without requiring physical onboarding or added layers of administration.
As financial tools become more deeply embedded into platforms, the line between service provider and financial enabler keeps shifting. For B2B companies, success may depend less on building everything in-house — and more on choosing the right partners.

