Wero is a pan-European digital wallet built on the back of instant payments infrastructure, letting you send money across borders as easily as you'd split a coffee with a friend. The service is backed by major European banks and payment networks, so it carries the weight of established financial institutions without the friction they're usually known for. It positions itself as a genuinely European alternative to the US-dominated payment apps—no geopolitical complications, just European banking rails doing what they should have been doing all along. The app focuses on person-to-person transfers, merchant payments, and basic wallet functionality, all tied to your existing bank account rather than a proprietary balance. What sets Wero apart is its foundation in real-time payments infrastructure and bank partnerships, giving it legitimacy and reach that pure fintech startups struggle to achieve. It's not trying to be a challenger bank or investment platform—it's building something narrower but potentially deeper: a payment layer that feels native to Europe rather than imported from Silicon Valley. As European instant payment networks mature and regulations push toward open banking, Wero represents the infrastructure play that could become quietly essential.