The best FinTech media outlets are publications with relevant financial-technology readership, reliable traffic, measurable engagement, and useful distribution value.
FinTech outlet selection is difficult because the category includes finance sites, banking trade media, startup publications, payments outlets, and broader business media. Many look relevant, but not all reach the right audience for a specific campaign.
Traffic alone is not enough. A smaller outlet may outperform a larger one on unique readership, engagement, topic fit, or reprint behavior.
The shortlist of top media outlets below was compiled based on data sourced from Outset Media Index (OMI), a media intelligence platform that helps PR teams compare outlets through a unified framework.
Why Has FinTech Outlet Selection Been Hard
FinTech is not one media category. A payments company, a lending platform, a neobank, a compliance startup, and an embedded finance provider may all need different outlets. Some campaigns need investor visibility. Some need banking-sector authority. Some need merchant reach. Others need product buyers, developer audiences, or regional market recognition.
The problem is that most media lists do not separate these needs clearly.
Traditional outlet research often combines traffic estimates from one tool, domain metrics from another, manual media-kit claims, and past agency experience. Those inputs can help, but they do not create a single quality benchmark.
This creates three common problems for PR teams.
First, large publications get over-selected because they are familiar.
Second, niche outlets get missed because their traffic does not show their real influence.
Third, campaign budgets are allocated without a clear view of audience quality, repeat visibility, or post-publication distribution.
OMI addresses this by consolidating scattered outlet signals into one standardized system, so teams can compare publications side by side instead of switching between disconnected tools.
How OMI Narrows the Field for FinTech Campaigns
A useful FinTech shortlist starts with filters. In OMI, PR teams can narrow the full media pool by applying a Media Type filter, a Languages filter, and a working threshold for Unique Score.
The selection logic goes as follows:
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Select outlets relevant to FinTech or finance-focused coverage.
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Limit the list to English-publishing outlets.
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Apply a Unique Score working threshold to remove outlets where headline traffic may not represent meaningful readership.
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Rank the remaining publications by GRP.
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Review supporting indicators such as Average Traffic 3M, Average Unique Traffic 3M, and Reprints.
This creates a more defensible shortlist.
It does not assume that the largest outlet is automatically the best outlet. It asks whether the publication has enough relevant audience, enough authentic readership, enough engagement depth, and enough distribution value to justify campaign attention.
OMI currently covers 340+ outlets across crypto-native media, finance, tech, and broader news sites that report on digital assets and related sectors, with more generalist publications planned as the index develops.
Methodology Note: What the Key OMI Metrics Measure
This shortlist uses OMI public signals as decision inputs. The ranking is based on GRP after applying FinTech relevance, English-language publication, and Unique Score quality logic.
Unique Score
Unique Score helps PR teams understand whether an outlet’s audience base appears meaningfully distinct.
This matters because traffic can be inflated by repeat visits, syndication loops, low-quality referrals, or inconsistent measurement patterns. A stronger Unique Score gives the team more confidence that the outlet is not only generating visits, but reaching a usable readership base.
For FinTech campaigns, this is important when entering new markets.
A PR team does not just need a high number. It needs confidence that the outlet can reach real readers in finance, banking, payments, compliance, startup, or technology segments.
Average Traffic 3M
Average Traffic 3M shows recent traffic across a three-month window.
This helps reduce overreaction to one unusually strong or weak month. FinTech media can be affected by funding cycles, regulatory news, market events, product announcements, and macroeconomic shifts. A three-month average gives PR teams a steadier view.
For campaign planning, this helps teams understand baseline reach.
Average Unique Traffic 3M
Average Unique Traffic 3M helps separate total visits from distinct reader exposure.
This is especially useful when comparing outlets with similar traffic levels. One publication may produce many repeat visits from the same audience, while another may reach a broader set of readers.
For media buyers and advertisers, this distinction matters.
A campaign may need repeat exposure, new audience access, or both. Average Unique Traffic 3M helps clarify which outlet is better aligned with that goal.
Reprints
Reprints show whether a story can travel after the first publication.
For FinTech PR teams, reprint behavior can add value because it extends the life of a placement. A strong reprint profile may help a story reach adjacent audiences across finance, technology, startup, and regional media spaces.
This is especially useful for market-entry campaigns.
If a FinTech company is entering a new region, a publication with strong reprint behavior may help the announcement move further than a single article page.
The Top 5 FinTech Media Outlets in 2026
1. investing.com
OMI public data card
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Average Traffic 3M: 179,898,448
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Average Unique Traffic 3M: 29,130,000
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Unique Score: 9.98
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LLM Referral Share: 0.44%
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Reprints: 0–22
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General Score: 98.54
investing.com ranks first in the updated OMI view by Unique Score and also has the highest General Score in the visible set. Its main strength is scale: the outlet combines very high Average Traffic 3M with the largest Average Unique Traffic 3M among the selected publications.
For FinTech PR teams, this makes investing.com a strong option when the campaign needs broad market visibility across finance, investing, trading, and digital-finance audiences.
The lower LLM Referral Share should still be considered. If AI-assisted discovery is a priority, teams may want to pair investing.com with outlets that show stronger LLM visibility or reprint potential.
2. ft.com
OMI public data card
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Average Traffic 3M: 36,105,959
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Average Unique Traffic 3M: 13,290,000
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Unique Score: 9.35
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LLM Referral Share: 0.75%
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Reprints: 1–23
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General Score: 77.84
ft.com ranks second in the updated view by Unique Score and gives PR teams access to a premium finance and business audience. It has strong Average Traffic 3M, high Average Unique Traffic 3M, and a strong Unique Score.
For FinTech companies targeting investors, financial institutions, enterprise buyers, policymakers, or global business readers, ft.com can support credibility and market authority.
Its General Score is lower than some other outlets in the visible table, so teams should not treat it as the highest overall performer by every OMI measure. Its value is strongest when the campaign requires finance credibility, business context, and high-quality audience access.
3. thestreet.com
OMI public data card
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Average Traffic 3M: 21,980,066
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Average Unique Traffic 3M: 13,230,000
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Unique Score: 9.35
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LLM Referral Share: 0.2%
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Reprints: 3–27
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General Score: 85.41
thestreet.com ranks third in the updated view by Unique Score and has the second-highest General Score among the selected five. Its Average Unique Traffic 3M is close to ft.com, which makes it a strong finance-audience option for U.S.-focused campaigns.
For PR teams targeting retail investors, personal finance audiences, market-aware consumers, or financial product users, thestreet.com offers a useful combination of reach and finance relevance.
Its LLM Referral Share is lower than the other selected outlets, so it may be less suitable as the primary choice when AI-assisted discovery is a major campaign goal. Its Reprints range still gives it added distribution value.
4. fnnews.com
OMI public data card
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Average Traffic 3M: 6,405,545
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Average Unique Traffic 3M: 4,181,000
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Unique Score: 8.44
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LLM Referral Share: 0.64%
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Reprints: 2–14
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General Score: 77.08
fnnews.com ranks fourth in the updated view by Unique Score. It has a smaller traffic base than investing.com, ft.com, and thestreet.com, but its Average Unique Traffic 3M and Unique Score suggest a meaningful readership base.
For PR teams entering Asian financial markets or seeking finance-related visibility outside the U.S. and UK media set, fnnews.com may be useful to review. It can add regional perspective to a FinTech shortlist, especially for campaigns where market coverage should not be limited to U.S. outlets.
Its Reprints range is moderate, so teams should assess whether the campaign needs regional audience access, secondary distribution, or both.
5. markets.businessinsider.com
OMI public data card
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Average Traffic 3M: 7,476,002
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Average Unique Traffic 3M: 3,533,000
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Unique Score: 8.30
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LLM Referral Share: 0.25%
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Reprints: 4–8
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General Score: 78.52
Markets.businessinsider.com ranks fifth in the updated view by Unique Score. It offers finance and markets coverage within a recognizable business-media environment, which can help FinTech campaigns connect financial topics with broader business relevance.
Its General Score is slightly higher than ft.com and fnnews.com in the visible OMI data, but its Unique Score places it fifth in this updated shortlist. This makes it a strong supporting outlet when teams want market visibility, business context, and a familiar publication environment.
The lower Reprints range means it may not be the strongest choice for syndication-led campaigns. It can still be useful when the campaign needs credible finance-market positioning.
How PR Teams Should Use This FinTech Shortlist
The best FinTech media outlets are not the same for every campaign.
The OMI shortlist gives PR teams a strong starting point: investing.com, ft.com, thestreet.com, fnnews.com, and markets.businessinsider.com. Each one fits a different campaign need.
Trading and investment platforms will find investing.com, thestreet.com, and markets.businessinsider.com the closest match.
For campaigns targeting institutional finance or policy-aware readers, ft.com carries stronger authority. Companies entering Asian financial markets should also review fnnews.com for regional fit outside the U.S. and UK media set.
Treat the shortlist as a ranked starting point, then narrow by GEO, coverage type, campaign goal, and audience fit in OMI.
FAQ
What makes a good FinTech media outlet to pitch?
A good FinTech media outlet has relevant readers, credible category coverage, authentic audience signals, and enough engagement to support the campaign goal. Traffic matters, but it should be reviewed with Unique Score, Average Unique Traffic, and Reprints.
How is FinTech outlet selection different from generic media selection?
FinTech outlet selection requires a stronger audience fit. PR teams need publications that understand finance, payments, banking, compliance, or financial infrastructure. Generic business media may offer reach, but specialized FinTech outlets often provide better relevance.
What is OMI’s Unique Score and how does it work?
OMI’s Unique Score helps assess whether an outlet’s audience appears meaningfully distinct and useful, not only inflated by repeated or low-quality traffic. PR teams can use it as a working threshold before ranking outlets by GRP.
How do PR teams build a FinTech media shortlist quickly?
PR teams can start with OMI filters: Media Type, Language, GEO, Types of Coverage, Unique Score, and Price per Post. Then they can rank relevant outlets by GRP and review traffic, unique traffic, and Reprints.
Should PR teams always choose the highest-traffic FinTech outlet?
No. High traffic can help, but it does not guarantee audience quality, relevance, engagement, or secondary distribution. A smaller outlet with a stronger Unique Score, or Reprints, may fit the campaign better.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal, financial, or investment advice.