
Review on Integrityfncbank
Summary
About Integrityfncbank
The website in question, integrityfncbank.com (operating under the name “Integrity Financial Bank” in its content), presents itself as a full-service digital bank offering checking and savings accounts, credit cards, global transfers, mobile deposits and more. It claims to have been founded in 2013 and to operate globally across the United States, Europe, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Japan, India, New Zealand and France. On the surface this sounds appealing. The site offers “world class & fastest digital banking service,” “bank-level security,” “no ATM fees / no minimum balance / no overdrafts” among other promises.
However, a deeper investigation uncovers multiple serious concerns: the domain is extremely new (registered March 2025) and hidden behind anonymised WHOIS, it is hosted on a shared server with other suspicious websites, it has a low trust score from independent site-checkers indicating a high likelihood of being a scam. In short: while the promise is that of a legitimate digital bank, the reality appears to strongly indicate that the site is not a properly regulated, genuine bank—and therefore using it exposes you to significant risk.
More Details
Based on the evidence and without contradiction, it is our assessment that integrityfncbank.com is very likely a scam (or at least not a legitimate, properly regulated online bank). Here is the detailed reasoning:
First, legitimate banks are required (in most jurisdictions) to be regulated by appropriate authorities, display licensing information, deposit insurance (e.g., FDIC in the US), and provide verifiable company registration data. This site lacks those disclosures. The claim of being “founded in 2013” conflicts with the domain registration in March 2025—an immediate mismatch.
Second, the site’s trust score by independent tools is extremely low, emphasising the weakness of its claims. According to ScamAdviser, the site is hosted on a shared server with other suspicious domains, has hidden ownership, a new domain, low traffic, and signs of spam or malicious associations. These are all typical characteristics of scam websites.
Third, the marketing language is overly broad and unrealistic. The claim to have “global coverage” across numerous countries, “no fees/overdrafts”, “instant processing” and “lowest fee” positions it more like a too-good-to-be-true offer rather than a measured, regulated banking institution.
Fourth, the login portal raises alarm: if someone registers or deposits funds, there is a high likelihood that no real banking infrastructure backs it and the “account” may be a façade, with withdrawal impossible or subject to trickery (e.g., asking further payments to “release funds”, or offering unrealistic interest, then vanishing). Given the lack of regulatory safety net, users would have no recourse.
Fifth, scammers often establish bank-type websites to harvest personal information, credentials, or to lure depositors with “special offers” and then disappear. Given the pattern of indicators here (new domain, hidden ownership, server hosting concerns), integrityfncbank.com fits this pattern closely.
Finally, since there are no verifiable reviews or credible independent attestations of actual customers using real banking services, the “global bank” narrative is unsupported. That leaves the high risk that once you deposit or engage, you may lose money or expose your identity.
Conclusion of this section: the combination of newness, hidden details, independent low trust ratings, and lack of regulatory transparency mean that integrityfncbank.com should be treated as a scam or fraudulent site until proven otherwise. It is not safe to deposit money, open accounts, or provide sensitive personal/financial information to it.

Warning: Low score, please avoid this website!
According to our review, this website has a higher risk of being a scam website.
It may attempt to steal your funds under the pretense of helping you make money.
Notice: High Score — Not likely to be a scam website.
According to our review, this website has a low risk of being a scam.
There is minimal indication of fraudulent activity.
Notice: Moderate score — Caution advised.
According to our review, this website shows a moderate risk level based on current data.
There is no strong evidence of a scam, but users should proceed carefully.
Photos of Integrityfncbank
Pros
- There is a login portal publicly visible, which gives the appearance of an “active banking platform”.
- The website appears professionally designed and offers an appealing set of digital banking features (mobile deposits, online transfers, global coverage).
- It uses a valid SSL certificate, meaning data between your browser and the site is encrypted (though encryption alone does not equal legitimacy).
Cons
- As outlined above, the domain is extremely new and the site lacks verifiable regulatory/licensing information—this is a major disadvantage because you can’t trust your funds will be safe or insured.
- The site hosts lofty claims that do not match supporting evidence; no proof of its claimed founding year (2013) or global operations is provided.
- The site is flagged by independent scam-detection services as high risk.
- Shared hosting with other suspicious sites means increased risk of server compromise.
Website Overview
Country:
USA
Operating Since:
2025
Platforms:
Mobile/Desktop
Type:
Online bank
Spread:
N/A
Funding:
Online bank
Leverage:
N/A
Commission:
N/A
Instruments:
N/A
Keypoints
Generic, stock-style marketing language: The “about us” page uses very broad language (“we have experienced many highs and lows, revolutions, economic crises… we connect customers to opportunities”) but lacks verifiable milestones, audited financials or detailed history.
Extremely recent domain age: The domain was registered 13 March 2025 with renewal scheduled for March 2026. A genuine bank typically has years of operating history; a brand-new domain is a warning sign.
Low trust / “very likely scam” rating: Independent website-analyser tools (e.g., ScamAdviser) flagged the site with a very low trust score, citing “strong likelihood” of scam.
Shared hosting server with other suspicious sites: The site is hosted on a server that is home to multiple other low-trust or suspicious websites. Genuine banks usually operate on dedicated networks/clouds, with stronger infrastructure.
Overall Score
Final Thoughts
After viewing and analyzing the site thoroughly by our experts and undergoing the proper process, we have reached a final conclusion.
In the world of online banking and digital finance, caution must always be the rule rather than the exception—especially when dealing with entities that lack transparency or regulatory guarantee. The site integrityfncbank.com is a textbook example of what to watch out for.
While the website presents a polished façade with many appealing features, upon closer inspection the foundational trust mechanisms — licence, regulation, track record, company identity, deposit insurance — are entirely absent. The claim to global operations is unsubstantiated, the domain is brand new, and independent analysis marks it as extremely high risk.
If you engage with this platform, you are effectively trusting your money and identity to an unverified entity. Given the stakes involved (your funds, your personal data, your future financial security), the prudent course is to avoid using this site entirely. Choose institutions that are clearly regulated, transparent about their licensing and deposit protections, and have a credible operating history.
If you have already interacted with integrityfncbank.com — opened an “account,” provided identity documents or made a deposit — you should act immediately: cease further actions, monitor your financial accounts for suspicious activity, report the incident to your local consumer protection authority or bank regulator, and consider whether identity theft protections are needed.
In summary: Do not trust this site with your money or reliable personal information. Treat it as a scam, or at best a highly risky pseudo-bank, with no guarantee of safety.
Comments