The GCC’s financial technology sector has crossed a threshold in 2026, moving decisively from pilot programmes and regulatory sandboxes into commercial deployment. In March 2026, Saudi Arabia’s central bank — the Saudi Central Bank, known as SAMA — granted its first live open banking licences to firms that had previously operated within its regulatory sandbox, enabling real-time data sharing between banks and third-party financial services providers for the first time at scale.
The transition from sandbox to live operation is significant because it shifts open banking from a theoretical framework into a functioning infrastructure with commercial implications. APIs are now enabling real data-sharing between Saudi banks and authorised fintechs, unlocking more precise credit products, faster onboarding processes, and personalised financial services that were previously only available to larger institutional customers.
Riyad Bank and Ripple Launch Blockchain Cross-Border Pilot
Simultaneously, Riyad Bank’s digital banking arm Jeel has partnered with Ripple to pilot blockchain-based cross-border transfers and tokenisation within a regulated framework. The collaboration represents a meaningful step toward modernising the remittance and international payment infrastructure that underpins the Saudi economy — a country where a large expatriate workforce sends billions of dollars in remittances annually to South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East Africa.
Blockchain-based cross-border transfers offer two primary advantages over the conventional SWIFT correspondent banking route: speed and cost. Settlement that currently takes two to five business days can, in a blockchain-enabled system, occur within seconds, while the elimination of intermediary correspondent banks reduces the fee layers that erode the value of remittances sent by workers to their families.
Bahrain Completes Instant Payment Pilot
Bahrain, which has historically positioned itself as the GCC’s most open banking and fintech environment, successfully completed a pilot of instant payments using digital commercial bank money on Google Cloud’s Universal Ledger platform. The pilot demonstrated the feasibility of real-time interbank settlement using tokenised money — a model that regulators in multiple markets are exploring as a path toward a more efficient domestic payment system without the risks of fully decentralised cryptocurrencies.
The Kingdom’s early-mover advantage in fintech — it was the first GCC country to introduce a comprehensive fintech regulatory framework and to license digital banks — continues to attract international financial technology companies seeking a Gulf base that offers both regulatory clarity and proximity to the larger Saudi market.
Capital Continues to Flow Into GCC Fintech
Investment data reinforces the sector’s momentum. Fintech led sectoral funding in the GCC every single month through the first quarter of 2026, capturing 46 per cent of all capital deployed — including in March, when broader market conditions were challenging and many sectors saw investment retreat. Capital is flowing most strongly into payments infrastructure, embedded finance platforms, and B2B financial tools designed to generate recurring, subscription-style revenue that is less sensitive to geopolitical volatility than transaction-volume-dependent models.
Cross-border compliance technology — software that helps financial institutions navigate the complex web of sanctions, anti-money-laundering requirements, and know-your-customer rules across multiple jurisdictions — is emerging as a particularly active sub-sector, driven by the increasing complexity of the regulatory environment and the significant cost savings that automated compliance tools deliver at scale.
What’s Next for GCC Fintech
The convergence of open banking infrastructure, blockchain payment pilots, and sustained venture capital investment suggests that the GCC fintech market is approaching an inflection point. The next 12 to 18 months are likely to see the first truly scaled consumer fintech products emerge in Saudi Arabia — a market of more than 35 million people with high smartphone penetration and a young, digitally native population — while the UAE and Bahrain continue to compete as the preferred bases for regional fintech headquarters and licensing.
For investors, the GCC fintech opportunity combines the structural growth of a digitising financial services market with the backing of governments that have made financial modernisation a policy priority — a combination that rarely produces slow outcomes.



