Mooncard is a French-born corporate card platform that treats company spending like it actually matters. Built for mid-market businesses tired of expense report theatre, it combines physical and virtual cards with real-time spend visibility and automated compliance—no more spreadsheets, no more manual reconciliation, no more explanations that take longer than the purchase itself.
The platform issues cards to employees while maintaining absolute control at the center. Managers see transactions as they happen, approval workflows happen instantly, and accounting teams get data that's actually usable. It's less about giving employees freedom and more about giving finance teams their sanity back.
Unlike American corporate card incumbents that charge per card and treat integration like a favour, Mooncard pricing is transparent and the API connects to your actual accounting system. In Europe, where regulatory requirements and multi-currency complexity are facts of life, that matters. It's particularly resonant in France and across Western Europe, where the mid-market had essentially given up on tools that work.
The company sits in a competitive space—Brex and others are moving downmarket, while legacy corporate card providers are finally waking up. But Mooncard's positioning is distinctly European: designed for how mid-sized companies actually spend money here, not adapted from American assumptions. That localised approach has made it one of the few European fintech companies that's actually winning on its home turf.