The earliest interactions between a consumer and a financial provider rarely takes place in a branch, and the account opening is just the beginning. The most important moment, arguably, happens when money arrives into accounts, and ease of fund flows and accessibility carry weight that determines whether the relationship deepens or quietly dissolves.
First Money Wins the Relationship
The provider that captures that inflow becomes the default hub for spending, saving and borrowing, especially in the age of the banking platform and the FinTech platforms that square off for account primacy.
That shift is visible in the growing importance of “pay-in” experiences, spanning payroll deposits, gig earnings and platform payouts. Once funds land in a wallet or account, switching costs emerge almost immediately, not because of contractual friction, but because of habit. Consumers spend from where the money sits.
This dynamic is altering competitive priorities. Instead of competing primarily on rates or rewards, providers are competing to intercept the first dollar.
Liquidity Timing Shapes Behavior
The importance of that first deposit is reinforced by the structure of household cash flow. The latest Wage to Wallet findings from PYMNTS Intelligence, WorkWhile and Ingo Payments show that timing, rather than income level alone, governs financial decisions.
More than half of Labor Economy workers, 54%, needed funds before they were available to cover essential expenses in the past 90 days. That figure reflects a recurring mismatch between when bills arrive and when wages settle.
For these consumers, access to funds is not a convenience. It is a constraint. The report notes that shortfalls occur repeatedly, with 16% of workers encountering the gap at least four times in a single quarter.
This helps explain why immediacy is overtaking traditional value propositions. Consumers prioritize certainty that funds can be accessed when needed. The provider that offers that access becomes the default repository for deposits.
Platforms Turn Access Into Engagement
The response from platforms has been to move closer to the moment of payment. The recent integration between Branch and Stripe illustrates how that strategy is being operationalized.
The collaboration enables companies to embed digital wallets and debit cards directly into payout flows, allowing workers to receive funds instantly and spend from the same environment.
Earnings data from FinTech firms reinforces how deposits have become the starting point for broader engagement.
At SoFi, the expansion of products tied to its member base shows how deposit relationships translate into multi-product adoption. The company’s most recent earnings indicated that 40% of new products are opened by existing members, a signal that once funds are centralized, additional services follow. SoFi ended 2025 with roughly $37 billion in deposits, reflecting its success in capturing direct inflows.
LendingClub reported $9.8 billion in deposits, up 8% year over year, a base that supports both its balance sheet and its ongoing customer engagement strategy. On the conference call with analysts, executives noted that savings and checking accounts drive more frequent logins and increase the likelihood that customers return for future loans. Elsewhere, Block’s 9.3 million primary banking actives serve as a proxy for customers routing income into the platform and treating it as their main financial account.
From Accounts to Flow Control
The common thread across these developments is a shift in what it means to “own” the customer. Ownership is no longer tied to the account itself. It is tied to the flow of funds across a widening circle of use cases.
Platforms and FinTechs are designing experiences that capture those flows at the earliest possible moment, whether through payroll, gig payouts or embedded finance integrations. Banks, in turn, face the challenge of retaining deposits in an environment where switching requires little more than redirecting a payment. Providers that control that first stop gain more than deposits. They gain continuity.