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MENA Among World’s Fastest-Growing Digital Economies
The region is leading fintech adoption worldwide, with eCommerce, AI tools, and real-time payments reshaping the wider digital economy.
The Middle East and North Africa have emerged as one of the world’s most forward-moving digital economies, according to Checkout.com’s fifth annual State of Digital Commerce in MENA 2025 report. The study highlights how bold moves by central banks, regulators, and fintech innovators — combined with a digitally native population — are accelerating the region’s shift to a tech-driven economy.
Over the past five years, daily online transactions across MENA have surged by 139%, while Checkout.com’s own processing volumes have climbed 626%, including a 78% year-on-year increase. Food delivery now dominates as the leading eCommerce category, capturing 47% of online spending, followed by clothing and fashion (38%) and a tie between electronics and beauty products (34%).

MENA consumers are also reshaping financial habits. In the UAE alone, the use of Account Funding Transactions (AFTs) — which enable real-time digital payouts — has grown 388% in the past year. This shift is extending digital commerce well beyond shopping into areas like salary payments, gig economy wages, and peer-to-peer transfers. Meanwhile, the once-dominant cash-on-delivery model has dropped by 60% since 2020.
Fintech and AI continue to be key pillars of the region’s evolution. A reported 62% of users now engage with fintech platforms for investments and wealth management, while 43% send money weekly via digital wallets or apps. AI-driven shopping is already widely adopted, with 45% of consumers having used generative chatbots and 53% using visual search tools to support online purchases.
Also Read: A Guide To Digital Payment Methods In The Middle East
However, this increased digital maturity comes with new risks: Reports of online fraud have increased sharply — from 33% in 2023 to 49% in 2024 — driven in part by scams involving AI and deepfakes. Checkout.com highlights the growing need for intelligent fraud prevention, pointing to tools such as machine learning, behavioral biometrics, and anomaly detection as critical to maintaining security without compromising performance.
“In this increasingly competitive landscape, payment performance has become a critical differentiator,” said Remo Giovanni Abbondandolo, General Manager, MENA at Checkout.com. “Fast, secure, and intelligent payments are foundational to commercial success — not just at the point of transaction, but across the entire customer experience”.
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Lebanon Ministers Meet Visa Over National Digital Payment Platform
Finance and technology ministers say a comparative study and roadmap will follow before any decision on adopting a model.
Lebanon’s finance and technology ministers met representatives from Visa last week to discuss a proposed unified national digital payment platform for government services, according to a readout from the Ministry of Finance.
The meeting brought together Finance Minister Yassin Jaber, Minister of State for Technology and Artificial Intelligence Kamal Shehadeh, a Visa delegation, and experts from both ministries. Discussion focused on whether Lebanon could establish a single platform through which citizens and institutions would pay taxes, fees, fines and other official transactions electronically, using mobile phones and other digital channels.
The Visa delegation presented examples from countries that have adopted unified government payment platforms, including the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, Estonia and Jordan. According to the readout, the examples were presented as having increased collection rates and expanded financial inclusion.
Talks covered settlement mechanisms, direct transfer to the treasury account, financial reconciliation, risk management, cybersecurity, fees, and an operational model that would involve the private sector. The parties agreed to continue technical and institutional consultations, prepare a comparative study, and develop an implementation roadmap before any decision on adopting a model for Lebanon.
Jaber said the Ministry of Finance had already enabled citizens to pay using credit cards and e-wallets through transfer companies, but described the proposed platform as a further step. He framed the development of electronic payment and collection systems as a priority within the ministry’s modernization plan.
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Shehadeh outlined the citizen-facing concept as a single mobile application through which users could settle obligations to ministries, government institutions and other bodies.
“The idea, in short, is that any citizen downloads an application on their mobile phone, through which they can pay all service obligations for all ministries, government institutions, or those owned by the Lebanese state, and others as well, as the platform is not limited only to state institutions,” he said.
Shehadeh added that the platform would not displace banks and money transfer companies that currently provide collection services to the state, calling it complementary to their work.
