The Short Version
Varo earned a national bank charter in 2020, making it the first consumer fintech to become a real, regulated bank. That matters for FDIC insurance, deposit security, and regulatory credibility. But being a bank does not automatically make you the best banking app. Varo has no crypto product, its earnings tracking (Varo Cashflow) caps at , and its headline 5% APY only applies to the first $5,000 in savings with strict qualifying requirements. Kronos offers 30+ tradeable cryptos, early direct deposit, and 2.5% APY with no balance caps. Different strengths, different trade-offs.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Kronos | Varo |
|---|---|---|
| Crypto Trading | 30+ coins, zero fees (Kronos Pro) | Not available |
| Gig Earnings | Up to | Varo Cashflow: up to |
| Savings APY | 2.5% (no cap) | 5% on first $5,000 (qualifying), 3% standard |
| APY Balance Limit | No limit | 5% only on first $5,000 |
| Monthly Fees | Kronos Pro: $9.99/mo (free tier available) | $0 |
| Bank Charter | Partner bank model | Full national bank charter (FDIC direct) |
| Early Direct Deposit | Up to 2 days early | Up to 2 days early |
| Debit Card | Virtual + Apple Pay | Physical Visa debit |
| Gig Earnings Tracking | Yes (Uber, DoorDash, Lyft) | No |
| Check Deposit | Yes | Yes |
| Credit Builder | Not yet | Varo Believe (secured credit card) |
Where Kronos Wins
Crypto: 30+ coins vs zero
Like Chime and Dave, Varo has no crypto product. Zero coins. Zero trading. If you bank with Varo and want to buy Bitcoin, you need Coinbase or Robinhood or some other separate app with its own fees and verification process. Kronos gives you 30+ cryptocurrencies in the same app where your paycheck lands. For Kronos Pro members, every trade is zero-fee — no spread markup, no platform fee, no hidden costs.
This is not a niche feature anymore. A third of Americans under 40 own some form of cryptocurrency. Building a banking app in 2026 without crypto is like building a phone without a camera. You can do it, but you are asking customers to carry two devices.
Earnings tools: vs
Varo Cashflow lets you borrow up to against your next paycheck. The money is fee-free if you pay it back within 30 days. That is fair and transparent, and for a $50 shortfall before payday, it works fine. But life does not always throw $50 problems at you.
Kronos offers early direct deposit based on verified gig earnings, with no credit check and no interest for Kronos Pro members. When your transmission fails or your landlord wants first and last month's rent, the gap between and is the gap between managing the crisis and going into debt somewhere else to cover it.
Savings APY: the fine print matters
Varo advertises a 5% APY savings rate, which looks exceptional on paper. But read the fine print. That 5% rate only applies to the first $5,000 in your savings account, and you need to meet specific requirements each month: receive at least in direct deposits to your Varo checking account and make at least five debit card purchases. If you miss either requirement, the rate drops to 3%. Any balance over $5,000 earns 3% regardless.
Kronos pays 2.5% APY with no balance cap, no transaction requirements, and no hoops to jump through. If you have $5,000 or less and you hit Varo's requirements every single month, Varo's rate is technically better. But if you have $15,000 in savings, Kronos pays 2.5% on the full amount while Varo pays 5% on $5,000 and 3% on $10,000 — and only if you qualify. For real-world savers, the difference is smaller than Varo's marketing suggests.
Gig worker focus
Varo is a general-purpose neobank. It works fine for W-2 employees with steady paychecks. Kronos was built specifically for self-employed Americans and freelancers. It tracks your earnings from Uber, DoorDash, Lyft, and other platforms automatically, giving you a real-time income picture. When your income is irregular, knowing exactly how much you have earned this week — before the platform actually pays you — changes how you budget.
Where Varo Wins
Bank charter. Varo is a real, federally chartered bank. Your deposits are directly FDIC-insured by Varo Bank, N.A. For people who care about regulatory structure and the directness of their deposit insurance, this matters. Kronos uses a sponsor-bank model: USD is held as USDC stablecoin issued by Circle (NYDFS-regulated), with reserves attested monthly by a Big Four auditor — held in cash and short-duration US Treasury bills — and FDIC pass-through coverage via Lead Bank (Cert #58227) through our banking partner. Same coverage, different stack.
Credit building. Varo Believe is a secured credit card that reports to all three credit bureaus. You deposit money as collateral, use the card, and build credit history. Kronos does not currently offer a credit-building product. For people actively trying to improve their credit score, this is a real advantage.
No subscription fee. Varo is entirely free. No monthly fee, no minimum balance. Kronos has a free tier, but the strongest features — zero-fee crypto, higher feature limits — require Kronos Pro at $9.99 per month (or $5.99/week with a 3-day free trial).
Physical card and ATMs. Varo offers a physical Visa debit card and fee-free access to over 40,000 Allpoint ATMs. If you regularly need cash in hand, Varo's physical infrastructure is more developed.
The Charter vs Features Trade-off
Varo spent years and millions of dollars obtaining a national bank charter. That charter means direct FDIC insurance, direct regulatory oversight, and no dependency on partner banks. It is a genuine structural advantage that builds long-term trust.
But a charter does not add features. Varo's product has not evolved much since it became a bank. No crypto. Small feature limits. A savings rate with asterisks. Kronos took the opposite approach: build the features first — crypto, advanced earnings tools, high APY, gig worker tools — and use proven partner bank infrastructure for the banking rails. Both approaches have merit. The question is what you value more: the charter or the product.
Who Should Use Which?
Use Kronos if: You want crypto trading in your banking app, you need earnings tools over , you have more than $5,000 in savings and want a consistent APY, or you are a gig worker who wants an app built for irregular income.
Use Varo if: You want a chartered bank with direct FDIC insurance, you are building credit and need Varo Believe, you have less than $5,000 in savings and can hit the 5% APY requirements every month, or you prioritize having a physical debit card and large ATM network.
Bottom line: Varo proved that a fintech can become a real bank. Kronos is proving that a real banking app needs to be more than just a bank. Varo wins on structure. Kronos wins on substance. for self-employed Americans who want crypto, better earnings tools, and fewer asterisks on their savings rate, Kronos is the better product.
Also read: 5 Best Finance Apps for self-employed Americans | Kronos vs Dave | Kronos vs Chime
Banking Without Asterisks
30+ cryptos. early direct deposit. 2.5% APY on every dollar. No qualifying hoops.
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