Bahrain Attracts Record $1.8 Billion in FDI as Fintech and Financial Services Lead Growth

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Bahrain FDI has climbed to a record high, cementing the kingdom’s reputation as one of the Gulf’s most business-friendly and fintech-forward economies. The Bahrain Economic Development Board (EDB) secured investments of more than $1.8 billion across 99 projects, a milestone expected to create over 7,400 jobs in the coming years and reinforce the country’s standing as a regional financial hub.

The figures mark a steady upward trajectory for the island nation, with annual FDI inflows rising from $1.7 billion to $1.8 billion year on year, even as competition for capital across the Gulf intensifies.

A Broad-Based Investment Win

What stands out about Bahrain’s latest FDI haul is its breadth. Rather than relying on a single sector, the kingdom attracted capital across several industries. The industrial sector secured the largest share, followed by ICT, tourism and financial services.

That diversity matters. It shows international investors are backing Bahrain across the economy, from manufacturing and technology to hospitality and finance, reducing reliance on any one industry and building a more resilient base for growth.

A Regional Fintech Leader

Bahrain’s standout strength remains financial services. As one of the most established financial hubs in the GCC, the kingdom has built a balanced ecosystem of conventional and Islamic banks, investment firms, insurers and reinsurers, all anchored by a dynamic and fast-growing community of fintech players.

Bahrain was an early mover in financial technology, introducing regulatory sandboxes, open banking frameworks and crypto-asset rules ahead of many regional peers. That head start continues to pay off, drawing fintech startups and established players who value the kingdom’s clear, supportive regulatory environment.

  • A mature mix of conventional and Islamic banking institutions
  • Progressive open banking and digital-finance regulation
  • A growing roster of homegrown and international fintech firms
  • Strong links into the wider GCC market

Targeting 20% of GDP from Financial Services

Through its Economic Recovery Plan, Bahrain is aiming to grow the financial services sector’s contribution to GDP to around 20 per cent by 2026. The sector development strategy rests on five priorities: creating jobs, developing capital markets, strengthening legislation and regulation, growing the insurance sector, and advancing financial services and fintech.

Hitting that target would consolidate finance as a central engine of the economy and underline Bahrain’s pitch as a cost-effective, well-regulated gateway to the Gulf’s financial markets.

Why Investors Choose Bahrain

Bahrain’s appeal rests on a combination of factors: a long-established financial sector, competitive operating costs, a skilled bilingual workforce and easy access to the much larger Saudi market just across the causeway. For many companies, it offers a lower-cost base from which to serve the entire region.

Professionals weighing a move to the kingdom or comparing pay across the Gulf can consult our GCC salary guide 2026, which benchmarks compensation by role and country. Entrepreneurs assessing where to base a regional business may also find our guide to setting up a business in the Gulf in 2026 a useful reference on free zones, costs and licensing across the region.

Building on Momentum

The record FDI performance and the more than 7,400 jobs it is expected to generate point to a kingdom that is successfully converting its long-standing financial expertise into fresh investment and employment. With fintech leading the way, a diversified pipeline of projects and a clear strategy to grow financial services to a fifth of the economy, Bahrain is well positioned to keep climbing.

As the Gulf’s economies compete ever harder for global capital, Bahrain’s blend of openness, regulatory clarity and competitive costs is proving a winning formula, and the latest investment figures suggest the momentum is only building.

For a small kingdom, the strategy of playing to its strengths in finance and fintech while welcoming investors across industry, technology and tourism is paying clear dividends. The record FDI numbers are not just a headline figure but a vote of confidence in Bahrain’s long-term direction.

David Reynolds
David Reynolds
Sports Editor covering football, cricket, motorsports and major sporting events across the Gulf.

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