In North Africa and the broader Middle East, fintech discussions increasingly converge on one market due to its unique position as a bridge between both: Egypt. What was once a promising, fast-growing ecosystem has, over the past few years, begun to mature into one of the region’s most significant digital finance hubs.
Even a few years back, Egypt’s fintech landscape was defined by early-stage growth, regulatory experimentation and a surge in startup formation. Fast forward to now in 2026, and the picture looks markedly different. The ecosystem has expanded in both depth and scale, underpinned by regulatory momentum, digital infrastructure investment and a rapidly evolving startup landscape.
Today, Egypt is no longer an emerging fintech market. Despite challenges the past few years and other regional conflicts, the country has remained resilient and is becoming a cornerstone of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA)’s digital financial future, as well as one of the “Big Four” fintech players in the African continent.
From Early Growth to Ecosystem Scale

The most striking change from a few years back and in 2026 is the scale of Egypt’s fintech ecosystem.
According to Fintech Egypt, the number of fintech startups and payment service providers has grown more than fivefold in recent years, reaching over 177 companies operating across more than 14 fintech subsectors.
This growth has been accompanied by strong investment flows. In 2022 alone, Egyptian fintech startups attracted approximately $796.5million in total funding, including both venture capital and private equity investment.
More broadly, fintech has become one of the most dominant sectors within Egypt’s startup ecosystem. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), fintech accounted for nearly half of venture capital investment in Egypt in 2022, underscoring its central role in the country’s innovation economy.
This momentum has continued into 2026, with Egypt now firmly established as one of the largest fintech ecosystems in Africa and the Middle East.
Digital Transformation and Infrastructure as Catalysts
Fintech growth in Egypt cannot be separated from the country’s broader digital transformation and wider economic development transformation. A bit part of the wider change has been attributed to its national economic development strategy of Egypt Vision 2030.
Over the past decade, Egypt has invested heavily in digital infrastructure, connectivity and technology adoption. Mobile subscriptions now exceed 116 million, with over 90 million internet users, creating a boost towards digital financial inclusion services; this digital infrastructure has enabled a rapid shift toward electronic payments and digital transactions.
The fintech market itself reflects this transformation. Egypt’s fintech sector reached an estimated $765 million in market size in 2024 and is projected to grow to nearly $2.9 billion by 2033, highlighting strong long-term growth potential.
At the regulatory level, the Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) has played a critical role in shaping the ecosystem. Initiatives such as regulatory sandboxes, digital payment frameworks and support for contactless technologies (including tokenisation and mobile wallets) have helped accelerate adoption and innovation.
Just last year, for instance, the CBE announced the issuance of new regulations governing the licensing and registration of payment system operators and payment service providers.
In terms of on the ground, companies have reacted to the potential of one of Africa’ Big Four. For example, Visa recently has established a new sub-regional structure comprising Egypt, Libya, and Sudan. Also this year, Visa and MNT-Halan announced a partnership that will enable MNT-Halan to scale card issuance and distribution on Visa’s payment infrastructure, as part of its plans to expand the use of digital payments and card-based services in Egypt and other markets.
These developments illustrate a key theme in Egypt’s fintech story: digital transformation is not occurring in isolation. Rather, it is being actively driven by policy, infrastructure and institutional support.
Financial Inclusion and Consumer Adoption

Financial inclusion rates have risen significantly, with large segments of previously unbanked populations now accessing financial services through mobile wallets, digital payments and fintech platforms.
Recent studies indicate that fintech platforms in Egypt now serve tens of millions of users, with over 54 million active users across digital financial services, reflecting widespread adoption across both individuals and businesses.
This shift is also visible in payment behaviour.
Digital wallets, QR code payments and mobile banking applications are increasingly replacing cash transactions, particularly in urban areas. Across the country, fintech is becoming embedded in everyday economic activity; this is from retail payments to SME financing.
Fintech Players and Ecosystem Innovation
Egypt’s fintech ecosystem is also characterised by a diverse and expanding set of players.
Companies such as Fawry, one of Egypt’s largest digital payment platforms, have played a foundational role in building payment infrastructure across the country. Meanwhile, newer entrants such as Paysky, which provides digital payment solutions across multiple markets, illustrate how Egyptian fintech companies are scaling regionally.
Other startups are exploring innovative business models across lending, embedded finance and digital banking.
Platforms such as VaultPay are developing digital banking solutions aimed at providing financial services to underserved populations, while fintech-enabled companies like Breadfast are integrating payment and financial services into broader digital ecosystems.
These examples highlight a broader trend: fintech in Egypt is no longer confined to payments alone. It is expanding into various subsectors such as lending, insurtech, embedded finance and B2B financial infrastructure.
The Future
Egypt’s fintech ecosystem in 2026 reflects a market that has moved beyond its early growth phase. Despite regional challenges that impact Egypt, the country is resilient and fintech is helping play a role in its economic development.
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