Buyer Universe · Acquirer Profile

SoFi

SoFi Technologies is a U.S.-based consumer fintech company founded in 2011 and headquartered in San Francisco. The company offers student loan refinancing, personal loans, mortgages, credit cards, brokerage accounts, and FDIC-insured banking products under one app. SoFi went public via SPAC merger in June 2021 and received a national bank charter through the acquisition of Golden Pacific Bancorp in January 2022. The company also owns Galileo Financial Technologies, a payments and account infrastructure platform acquired in 2020 for $1.2 billion.

3Acquisitions tracked
$2.3BDisclosed value
2Sub-sectors
NASDAQ: SOFIListing

What companies has SoFi acquired?

Every deal resolves to its entry in the Windsor Drake Market Intelligence database, the single source of truth for the figures shown. Each is traceable to the company's own release and, where filed, the SEC filing.

TargetDisclosed valueSub-sectorAnnouncedSources
Peach Finance SoFi acquires Peach Finance, a lending infrastructure/loan servicing SaaS platform founded in 2018. Undisclosed Lending Tech (Consumer) May 22, 2026 Release
Technisys SoFi adds cloud-native core banking platform to pair with Galileo and own the full BaaS stack from issuer processing through to core ledger. $1.1B BaaS February 22, 2022 Release · SEC 8-K
Galileo Financial Technologies SoFi acquires API-based payments and BaaS platform to extend its consumer fintech into infrastructure-as-a-service for other fintechs and banks. $1.2B BaaS April 7, 2020 Release
Total disclosed since 2020 $2.3B 3 deals, 2 sub-sectors, 1 of 3 deals SEC-traceable

What is SoFi acquiring now?

The most recent disclosed acquisition tracked is Peach Finance (May 22, 2026, Lending Tech (Consumer)). Recent disclosed activity concentrates in BaaS, Lending Tech (Consumer).

Active-posture read written from sourced signals only. No unconfirmed speculation appears here.

Figures are disclosed deal values drawn from SoFi's own releases and, where available, confirmed against SEC filings (EDGAR Form 8-K), each linked at the deal row. Every figure resolves to a single record in the Windsor Drake Market Intelligence database; the profile presents that record, it does not fork it. Where a value cannot be tied to a filing or official release, it does not appear.

This profile reflects the public record. It is the visible layer of the buyer intelligence Windsor Drake maintains for live mandates, where coverage of a buyer extends to unannounced appetite, private acquirers, and direct corporate-development relationships.