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Digital Lending: What’s a nice-to-have vs. must-have for banks in 2026?

Outline

Remember the time when mobile banking was a nice-to-have?

Initially, there were questions around ROI and adoption. Around whether customers would shift their behavior.

Today, mobile banking isn’t a differentiator. It’s a given. And institutions that didn’t adapt in time didn’t just fall behind – they became irrelevant to a generation of customers.

Digital lending is now at that same inflection point.

The difference is, this time the window is smaller.

The Signal Is Already Clear

Customer behavior has moved.

  • A majority of banking interactions are now digital-first, with mobile leading the way (McKinsey)
  • More than half of consumers expect near-instant decisions on credit (Salesforce, FIS)
  • Abandonment rates increase sharply with every additional step or delay
  • The alternatives to banks (for digital lending) are all there and easily accessible

This isn’t just about preference. It’s about expectation.

And expectations, once set, don’t reverse.

The Redefinition of “Good Credit”

For years, credit was evaluated on a few core dimensions:

  • Was the credit decision sound?
  • Was the risk managed effectively?
  • Was the pricing competitive?

Those still matter.

But they are no longer sufficient.

Today, there is another filter – often the first and last one that matters:

How fast and easy was the experience?

If the answer isn’t “immediate and effortless,” the rest increasingly doesn’t get considered.

Where Traditional Models Break

Most institutions haven’t ignored digital lending.

They’ve approached it incrementally:

  • Digitizing parts of onboarding
  • Automating segments of underwriting
  • Introducing online application flows

Individually, these are meaningful improvements.

Collectively, they often fall short of what the customer actually experiences as “digital.”

Because from the outside, the journey is still fragmented:

Start online → continue offline

Apply digitally → wait for a manual approval

Get approved → fund access delayed

That gap – between partial digitization and true digital experience – is where customers drop off.

And where competitors win.

The Competitive Set Has Changed

Banks are no longer just competing with other banks.

They are competing with:

  • Fintechs offering approval in seconds
  • Embedded lending options appearing at checkout
  • Platforms that integrate credit seamlessly into any product/service journey

These experiences are not viewed as “innovative” by customers.

They are simply… what they expect.

And they redefine the baseline for everyone else.

The Cost of Waiting

The most dangerous assumption right now is:

“We can get there over time.”

Because time is exactly what’s compressing.

What happened with mobile banking over a decade is now happening in a few years  – sometimes faster.

And the cost of delay doesn’t show up cleanly in quarterly reports.

It shows up as:

  • Customers who never complete applications
  • Merchants who choose embedded financing partners
  • Borrowers who never even consider your institution

In other words, lost relevance before lost revenue.

What Forward-Thinking Institutions Understand

The institutions pulling ahead have made a subtle but critical shift.

They no longer view digital lending as a channel or a capability.

They view it as core infrastructure.

That means:

  • Automating processes instead of manual processing for onboarding & origination
  • Designing for real-time decisioning, not batch processing
  • Enabling immediate access to credit, not delayed disbursement
  • Embedding lending into customer journeys, not forcing customers into separate ones.

The Bottom Line

Digital lending is no longer optional.

Not because the industry says so. Because the customer already decided.

The only real question left is timing:

Do you close the gap while you still have the customer relationship – or after they’ve already turned to someone else?

The shift is already underway.

The institutions that recognize it early will define the next phase of lending.

The rest will spend the next few years catching up.

Does your financial institution have a “willing and able” partner to walk you through this and get this off the ground?

Disclaimer: The information in this article is for informational purposes only, and should not be construed or relied upon as legal advice on any subject matter. The author is not responsible for any consequences whatsoever arising from the use of such information.

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