Mobile application (00-1)
A cross-border transfer app for a digital bank under NDA
9:41
M
Welcome backMike Alvarez
Total balance
$12,480.55
▲ 2.4%vs last week
7-day balance
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🇩🇪
Anna Kramer
Sent · EUR
−$501.90
🌐
Upwork Ltd.
Received · USD
+$2,300
9:41
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Send money⋮
Recipients
A
J
S
O
+12
To Anna Kramer · •• 4021Germany
You send
$500.00
USD
1 USD = 0.9184 EUR · locked 12h
They receive
€459.20
EUR
Transfer fee$1.90
ArrivesToday, by 18:00
Send $501.90
9:41
€459.20 sent
Transfer #TR-8842 · 19 Jul, 9:41
A
Anna Kramer
Deutsche Bank · •• 4021
€459.20
Money taken
$501.90 · 9:41
Converted at locked rate
0.9184 EUR/USD
Delivered to bank
Expected today, by 18:00
ReferenceTR·8842·0KQ
(01)
About the project
A mobile app for a digital bank that moves money across borders. The client is under NDA, so the name, brand colors, and logo are withheld – the screens here are a concept redraw that keeps the product logic intact.
The core promise is simple: send money abroad in seconds, at a rate you can see before you tap send. Everything in the interface serves that one moment of trust.
(02)
What we designed
- /01A home screen that leads with one number – the total balance, then multi-currency switching, a seven-day trend, and three actions within thumb reach.
- /02A transfer flow that shows the live mid-market rate and the exact fee side by side, so “you send” and “they receive” are never a surprise.
- /03A rate that visibly locks for 12 hours, removing the fear that the number will move between tapping and confirming.
- /04A receipt built as a status timeline – taken, converted, delivered – instead of a dead confirmation screen.
- /05A calm dark theme with a single acid-lime accent reserved only for money-in and the primary action.
Key decisions(03)
Rate-firstThe exchange rate is visible before the send, not after
Locked FXA 12-hour hold turns anxiety into a decision you control
Status timelineEvery transfer answers “where is my money now?”
One accentLime marks only money-in and the primary tap
People don’t fear sending money abroad. They fear not knowing the rate until it’s gone.