SoFi has acquired Peach, a lending infrastructure platform founded 8 years ago, to add loan origination and servicing tools to its business-to-business technology unit. The acquisition represents SoFi's effort to broaden its fintech infrastructure offering by filling a gap in its existing technology stack. Peach operates an API-first, cloud-native platform used by financial institutions and fintech firms to launch and manage lending products, including personal loans, credit cards, auto loans, and buy-now-pay-later products. The platform supports more than $2 billion in active loans across more than 50 lenders, with clients including Square and Remitly. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
For SoFi, the acquisition fills a clear gap in its technology platform. Galileo provides clients with payments and account-level APIs, while Technisys provides core banking technology. Peach adds lending operations, including loan origination, servicing, and portfolio management. The deal gives SoFi a more complete infrastructure stack for banks, fintech firms, and non-financial brands looking to embed financial products. It also moves the company further beyond its original identity as a digital lender and consumer finance brand.
Peach is being folded into SoFi Technology Solutions, the company's B2B unit built around Galileo, which SoFi acquired in 2020 for more than $1 billion. The unit also includes Technisys, the core banking platform SoFi bought in 2022. By combining Peach with Galileo and Technisys, SoFi is trying to offer enterprise clients infrastructure that supports the full lifecycle of financial products. The strategy is not only to help clients launch accounts or cards, but also to help them manage credit products after origination.
The timing of the acquisition comes as SoFi's technology platform segment faces pressure. In the first quarter of 2026, revenue from the segment fell 27% year over year to $75.1 million. Enabled accounts also dropped 16% to 133 million, largely because of the loss of a major client. That decline exposed the concentration risk inside SoFi's B2B infrastructure business. Large enterprise clients can drive scale, but losing one can create a visible hit to revenue and account metrics. Adding Peach gives SoFi another product layer to sell into existing clients and another entry point for new enterprise customers. The acquisition also gives SoFi a clearer pitch: a single platform covering payments, card issuance, core banking, and lending infrastructure. For clients, that could reduce the need to stitch together multiple vendors. For SoFi, it could make the platform harder to replace if clients adopt several products across the stack.
The acquisition supports SoFi's broader effort to diversify revenue away from balance-sheet-driven lending. The company's consumer business remains large and fast-growing, with adjusted net revenue of $1.1 billion in the first quarter and loan originations of $12.2 billion. That business still carries exposure to credit cycles, borrower demand, and funding costs. By contrast, the technology platform generates fee-based revenue that is less directly tied to SoFi's own lending balance sheet. Expanding that segment has become more important as competition in digital lending and consumer finance remains intense.
Peach adds infrastructure for a core financial product category: loans. Lending remains one of the highest-value areas in fintech, but it is also operationally complex. Clients need systems for underwriting workflows, servicing, compliance processes, payment handling, borrower communications, and portfolio management.
The Peach deal is SoFi's second acquisition in a matter of weeks. It follows the purchase of assets from UK-based retail investment platform PrimaryBid, which gives SoFi technology that allows retail investors to participate in equity offerings. Together, the two transactions point to a broader buildout of SoFi's enterprise infrastructure business. Peach strengthens lending infrastructure, while PrimaryBid adds a capital markets access component. Both moves support SoFi's attempt to build a wider financial technology platform rather than rely only on consumer banking, lending, and brokerage products.
The lack of disclosed deal terms suggests Peach is a strategic addition rather than a large-scale acquisition comparable to Galileo or Technisys. Peach had previously raised tens of millions of dollars from investors including SciFi VC, Caffeinated Capital, Nyca Partners, and Canapi Ventures.
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