World Watch/Lebanon/Digital Payments & Fintech

Digital Payments & Fintech · Lebanon

Fintech & digital payments rules in Lebanon (2026)

PartialBanque du Liban (BDL) — Basic Circular No. 1 / Basic Decision No. 13790 (January 2026) for Electronic Payment Service Providers; BDL Basic Circular No. 69/2000 on Electronic Banking and Financial Transactions; Law No. 81/2018 on Electronic Transactions and Personal DataCountry index 64 · C+

Lebanon shaded by its digital payments & fintech status

Lebanon has a partial, BDL-centric regulatory framework for digital payments and fintech. Banque du Liban is the sole licensing authority for payment institutions and electronic payment service providers (EPSPs), and issued an overhauled licensing circular in January 2026 (Basic Decision No. 13790) establishing capital requirements, governance rules, and compliance timelines for EPSP/wallet operators and money-transfer companies. No comprehensive standalone fintech law exists, and key areas such as open banking, e-money/EMI licensing, and BNPL remain unaddressed by dedicated legislation.

Key points

Licensing authority & scope

Banque du Liban (BDL) is the exclusive regulator and licensor for all entities conducting electronic payment, money-transfer, or banking activities. Banks, financial institutions, and any third party must obtain prior BDL authorisation before offering digital payment services.

BDL Basic Circular No. 1 (January 2026)

Basic Decision No. 13790 of 9 January 2026 comprehensively overhauled the EPSP/wallet and money-transfer licensing regime, setting out capital requirements (LBP 2 billion deposited at BDL), IT/cybersecurity governance standards, and a six-month compliance transition for previously licensed non-bank institutions.

Foundational electronic-payments law

Law No. 81/2018 on Electronic Transactions and Personal Data provides the statutory basis for e-payments, digital money transfers, bank cards, and electronic cheques, vesting BDL with authority to license and regulate digital-money operations; it also establishes data-protection obligations applicable to fintechs.

Payment infrastructure (BDL-RTGS & BDL-CLEAR)

BDL operates both payment rails: BDL-RTGS (launched July 2012) for large-value real-time interbank settlement, and BDL-CLEAR (November 2013) for retail/automated clearing. Licensed fintech e-wallets plug into this infrastructure for P2P transfers, bill payments, remittances, and QR-code purchases.

No open banking or dedicated EMI regime

Lebanon has no open-banking mandate, no separate e-money institution (EMI) licence class, and no dedicated BNPL rules. Most non-bank payment service providers operate under BDL-issued licences as money-exchange or wallet companies rather than under a purpose-built PSP or EMI authorisation framework.

BDL Basic Circular No. 69/2000 — baseline e-banking rules

Basic Circular No. 69 (2000) remains the foundational BDL instrument for electronic banking and financial transactions, requiring licensed institutions to meet IT-security, business-continuity (Basic Decision No. 10227/2009), and cybercrime-prevention (Basic Circular No. 144/2017) standards as a precondition for digital payment operations.

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Last verified 5/24/2026 · Orientation, not legal advice - verify against the primary sources linked above. Explore the full world map →