Porters secures €2.7M to modernise banking operations with AI
AI-driven fintech startup Porters has raised €2.7 million in fresh funding to automate the complex, manual processes that still dominate back‑office work in many banks and financial institutions. The company’s platform applies AI algorithms and workflow automation to tasks such as onboarding, compliance checks, document processing and transaction monitoring.
While many banks have invested heavily in customer‑facing digital channels, their internal operations often remain fragmented and reliant on legacy systems. Porters aims to close this gap by providing a single orchestration layer that connects existing tools, captures unstructured data and standardises how routine work is executed.
Targeting the cost and risk of legacy banking workflows
According to the startup, banks still spend a significant share of their budgets on manual back‑office tasks, which are prone to human error and difficult to audit. By combining machine learning, document intelligence and rule‑based automation, Porters claims it can reduce processing times from days to minutes while improving regulatory traceability.
The new capital will be used to expand product development, strengthen integrations with core banking systems and scale commercial teams across Europe. The company is prioritising partnerships with mid‑sized and challenger banks that need to modernise quickly but lack the resources to rebuild their technology stacks from scratch.
AI as infrastructure for compliant, scalable banking
Rather than positioning itself as a replacement for existing banking software, Porters is pitching its platform as an infrastructure layer that sits on top of core systems. This approach allows financial institutions to maintain their current providers while layering in AI‑powered automation to streamline operations.
Industry observers note that demand for operational efficiency is intensifying as banks face pressure on margins, tighter regulatory compliance requirements and rising customer expectations for real‑time services. If Porters can demonstrate measurable cost savings and faster deployment than traditional transformation projects, it is likely to attract further interest from both financial institutions and investors.

