A Breakthrough Moment for Philippine Neobanks
Manila / Singapore, May 2026 — Tonik has reached a critical inflection point, becoming the first standalone digital bank in the Philippines to achieve sustained profitability.
The company reported positive consolidated net income in Q1 2026, covering all operational and risk-related costs. Simultaneously, its regulated arm, Tonik Digital Bank, Inc., posted IFRS profitability for the same quarter.
This positions Tonik among the fastest non-ecosystem neobanks globally to reach profitability—without relying on a telco, e-commerce, or legacy banking ecosystem.
A Credit-First Strategy That Paid Off
From the beginning, Tonik took a different approach compared to most digital banks: focus on lending, not just user growth.
While many competitors prioritized app downloads, deposits, and payment transactions, Tonik built its model around consumer credit, targeting the large segment of Filipinos underserved by traditional financial institutions.
The strategy is grounded in economics:
- Lending customers generate significantly higher revenue than payments users
- The Philippines still faces a major credit inclusion gap, not a payments gap
Five years later, that disciplined focus has translated into real profitability and strong capital efficiency.
Key Metrics That Define Tonik’s Performance
As of April 2026, Tonik’s numbers highlight a highly optimized digital lending business:
- Loan portfolio: USD 110 million (2.3× year-on-year growth)
- Annualized revenue: USD 60M+, with 99% driven by lending
- Net Interest Margin (NIM): 51%
- RAROC: 25%
- Loan-to-deposit ratio: 82%
- Net LTV/CAC: 23×
These metrics reinforce a clear narrative: Tonik is built on lending productivity—not user acquisition metrics.
Why This Matters for the Industry
Tonik’s profitability is significant because it challenges the dominant playbook in digital banking.
Globally, many neobanks rely on ecosystem backing—leveraging platforms like e-commerce, telecom, or super apps to scale quickly. However, these models often face long-term limitations in monetization and independence.
Tonik demonstrates that a standalone digital bank can scale sustainably by focusing on its balance sheet and core banking fundamentals.
The Three Drivers Behind Profitability
AI-Driven Credit and Risk Models
Tonik has refined its underwriting capabilities over several years, enabling it to serve thin-file borrowers while maintaining strong risk-adjusted returns.
Diversified Lending Channels
Its portfolio spans:
- Employer-based salary deduction loans
- Merchant installment financing
- Digital personal loans
This multi-channel approach reduces concentration risk while sustaining growth.
Structural Funding Advantage
With a license from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, Tonik accesses deposits at 3–6% funding cost, significantly lower than non-bank lenders that often exceed 15%.
Leadership Perspective
Greg Krasnov, Founder and CEO of Tonik, emphasized that profitability was a deliberate outcome:
“Profitability in digital banking is a function of what you choose not to do. We didn’t chase vanity metrics or build deposits without deployment. We focused on building a credit institution with strong unit economics.”
He added that Tonik is now positioned to scale into the Philippines’ $50–100 billion credit gap, combining profitability with long-term growth potential.
What Comes Next
With profitability achieved, Tonik is shifting toward accelerated expansion.
Key priorities include:
- Scaling employer-based lending via Tendo
- Expanding its merchant financing network
- Enhancing revolving credit products to increase customer lifetime value
The focus remains consistent: grow sustainably without external subsidy.
Tech Patrol Take
Tonik’s milestone marks a shift in the Philippine fintech landscape—from growth-first to profitability-first digital banking.
By prioritizing lending economics over user acquisition hype, Tonik has proven that sustainable fintech models are achievable in the local market.
Expect this to influence how future digital banks in the Philippines build—and measure—success.

