TrueLayer vs Lemonway
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
TrueLayer is in steady infrastructure-grind mode — Console roles, mandate management, enterprise limits, geographic expansion.
TrueLayer's recent releases are operational maturity work rather than directional moves: a new Payments Controller role in Console for refund/sweep/payout permissions, mandate visibility and management in Console, the maximum sweeping amount lifted to £1 million for enterprise customers, and HP2 (the hosted payment page) now usable in Germany. The cadence is methodical — small unlocks each month rather than headline releases.
TrueLayer is in the part of the lifecycle where most public releases are about operational depth: more granular admin roles, larger limits, more geographic coverage, more in-Console manageability. That's the right work for a payments infrastructure platform serving fintech and merchant customers, but it doesn't reframe the product. Expect more European market rollouts (HP2 added Germany in February) and continued role/permission granularity.
Watch for the Console product to keep absorbing operational tasks that customers used to do via API only — bulk payout management, more reporting, dispute-style flows. A direction toward 'Console as the primary surface for non-engineering finance ops' is plausible.
Lemonway's feed is mostly bank-holiday ops with one real onboarding tweak buried in it.
Lemonway's recent changelog is dominated by recurring operational notices: SEPA and international-transfer cutoffs around French bank holidays, a sandbox server migration tied to PCI/DSS infrastructure work, and support-availability windows. The substantive product change in the window is the removal of an OTP step from the Online Onboarding identity-verification flow (QES by Onfido).
As a regulated French PSP, Lemonway's customer-visible work mostly orbits around banking calendar rhythms and compliance plumbing. Product evolution shows up sparingly — the OTP removal in February and Faster Pay by Bank in January are the only two real feature notes in the past four months — pointing at a roadmap focused on conversion friction in onboarding and SEPA-Instant settlement speed.
Expect the operational-notice cadence to continue around upcoming French bank holidays. Real product motion is likely to stay on the onboarding and pay-by-bank surfaces, since those are where the team has invested visibly in the past quarter; anything else would be a departure from the established pattern.
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