Published: 12 June 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online.
Barclays has officially agreed to purchase the prominent youth financial platform known as GoHenry. This strategic acquisition directly targets the children of affluent families across the United Kingdom. The high street banking giant intends to absorb the entire British operation very smoothly. The current owner, a United States fintech firm called Acorns, will keep the American division.
While the financial details remain undisclosed, the transaction should conclude early next year. Interestingly, Barclays has decided that the well-known GoHenry branding will remain completely unchanged. The move represents a major effort to secure loyal customers at a very early age.
Louise Hill originally co-founded the innovative pocket money business back in the year 2012. She created the concept after listening to parents discuss their children’s bad spending habits. The platform offers specialized prepaid debit cards alongside a comprehensive money management mobile application. It specifically helps children aged between six and eighteen to save and invest money. Parents can also set strict spending limits and monitor every transaction quite easily.
Currently, around half a million British children actively use these colourful debit cards weekly. The business achieved an estimated valuation between two hundred and five hundred million dollars. Hill eventually sold her growing enterprise to Acorns but maintained her executive role throughout.
The chief executive of Barclays UK, Vim Maru, expressed great enthusiasm about this deal. He stated that the acquisition will significantly turbocharge their existing family banking products. Louise Hill also reassured the public that the familiar brand is not going anywhere. She believes that partnering with Barclays allows the application to achieve much greater goals. Furthermore, the collaboration provides teenagers with a natural transition into adult banking at eighteen. Hill firmly believes that financial education should never have a definitive starting or ending date.
The entire global company boasts over two million active users across several European nations. It currently employs approximately two hundred dedicated staff members to manage its international operations. When the business first launched, the founders chose the slightly unusual name of PKTMNY. Hill later admitted that the original name was a remarkably silly idea for them. Customers struggled to spell or pronounce the name during the early days of trading. They changed the name eighteen months later, inspired by an eleven-year-old boy named Henry.
This major takeover provides Barclays with a much stronger foothold in youth banking services. Traditional high street banks are fighting hard to protect their future customer pipelines today. Digital rivals like Revolut and Monzo recently launched competitive youth accounts with attractive interest.
Consequently, Barclays is now playing catch-up against its long-term traditional rival, NatWest Group. NatWest successfully acquired a similar pocket money application called RoosterMoney a few years ago. That specific acquisition allowed NatWest to offer parental alerts and specialized youth debit cards.
Financial analysts believe this move focuses heavily on customer inertia and cross-selling opportunities. Benjamin Toms, an expert at RBC Capital Markets, shared his professional insights on this. He noted that the global GoHenry business has historically operated at a financial loss. Therefore, the acquisition is primarily about securing early relationships with wealthy British families. Winning new customers in the United Kingdom is traditionally an expensive and difficult process.
British consumers notoriously prefer to stay with their existing banks for many decades. While children do not hold massive cash deposits, they represent valuable future credit customers. Embedding services within affluent households makes it much harder for competitors to steal them. High street banks increasingly look towards wealthy families to secure stable long-term financial growth. This strategy reduces their heavy reliance on interest rate fluctuations and traditional everyday lending.
Barclays recently lost a highly competitive bidding war for the wealth manager Evelyn Partners. Meanwhile, Lloyds Banking Group has expanded its own wealth management division significantly this year. Barclays informed its investors that the GoHenry deal will slightly reduce its capital ratio. However, directors confirmed that the transaction will not disrupt their official financial targets. Investors reacted very positively to the announcement, sending Barclays shares up by five percent.
























































































