Digital Payments & Fintech · North Korea
Fintech & digital payments rules in North Korea (2026)
North Korea shaded by its digital payments & fintech status
North Korea operates a closed, state-controlled domestic electronic-payments system rather than a market-style fintech licensing regime. An Electronic Payment Law passed in 2021 puts the Central Bank in charge of approving and supervising payment networks, which may be run by banks or by approved institutions/enterprises outside the banking sector, with state-issued electronic certificates required for transactions. The country has no open banking, no internationally interoperable instant-payment rails, and no BNPL framework; it is largely cut off from the global financial system by UN/US sanctions and a SWIFT disconnection.
Key points
The Supreme People's Assembly Standing Committee adopted an Electronic Payment Law in late October 2021 (reported 1 Nov 2021), placing the Central Bank of the DPRK in charge of approving and supervising electronic payment networks; the law was later revised and reportedly threatens fines on businesses that refuse to adopt e-payments.
Systems may be established by banks and 'independently by institutions, enterprises, and organizations outside the banking sector,' but only under Central Bank approval/oversight, with transactions backed by state-issued electronic certificates. There is no Western-style EMI/payment-institution licensing taxonomy.
Operating products include the Central Bank's Jonsong Card (since ~2015), the Foreign Trade Bank's Narae card (launched Jan 2011), and the Samhung electronic wallet (shown on state TV Oct 2023); the Ullim network functions as a clearing/gateway layer linking cards and apps.
Specialist analysts describe an emerging fintech industry backed by major domestic IT firms; apps support QR/barcode and bank transfers, foreign-currency top-ups at fixed rates, and bill, transport and ticket payments — but operate entirely within the state-run network.
There is no published open-banking framework, no internationally interoperable instant-payment scheme, and no buy-now-pay-later regulation; the architecture is a centrally controlled clearing system aimed at state revenue and monetary control rather than competitive fintech.
DPRK banks were disconnected from SWIFT (last four removed in March 2017) and the country is broadly excluded from international payment rails by UN Security Council resolutions and US/FinCEN/OFAC measures, so its e-payment regime is essentially domestic-only.
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