World Watch/Syria/Digital Payments & Fintech

Digital Payments & Fintech · Syria

Fintech & digital payments rules in Syria (2026)

Licensing regimeCentral Bank of Syria (CBS) — Payment Systems Directorate licenses 'electronic payment and collection services companies' under CBS regulations, supported by sectoral laws (Banking Secrecy Law, AML/CFT Law, Electronic Transactions Law, Electronic Signature Law, Electronic Crime Law).Country index 64 · C+

Syria shaded by its digital payments & fintech status

Syria operates a dedicated, in-force licensing regime for electronic payment and collection services companies, administered by the Central Bank of Syria's Payment Systems Directorate; mobile-money services (Syriatel Cash, MTN Pay) and the Syrian Electronic Payment Company (SEP) have operated under it since around 2021. After years of isolation, in 2026 the CBS substantially modernized the regime — most notably a 4 May 2026 decision permitting licensed banks and payment companies to connect to global networks (Visa/Mastercard), with first live trials on 9 May 2026. Dedicated frameworks for open banking and BNPL are not yet evident; the regime centers on payment-institution/e-money-style licensing rather than those specific verticals.

Key points

Regulator & licensing authority

The Central Bank of Syria, through its Payment Systems Directorate, licenses and supervises electronic payment companies and develops the operational and regulatory instructions for electronic payment and financial technologies.

Licensing requirements

Applicants must specify the electronic payment/collection services in their articles of association; any new service needs prior CBS approval. The initial license approval can be revoked if registration is not completed within one year, and operations remain under continuous CBS supervision.

Applicable legal framework

Licensed payment firms are subject to the Banking Secrecy Law, the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Law, the Electronic Transactions Law, the Electronic Signature Law, the Network Services Law, and the Electronic Crime Law.

Operating market (mobile money)

Mobile operators Syriatel and MTN launched e-payment services (Syriatel Cash, MTN Pay) in May 2021; their combined share of e-payments to public entities rose to over 45% of such payments by 2023, alongside the Syrian Electronic Payment Company (SEP).

2026 opening to global networks

On 4 May 2026 the CBS issued a decision permitting licensed banks and electronic payment companies to deal directly with global networks such as Visa and Mastercard; live trials began 9 May 2026, ending ~15 years without those cards, alongside a domestic 'Paymera' network.

Ongoing modernization & gaps

CBS signed an MoU with Mastercard (Sept 2025) and a digital-payments roadmap with Visa (Dec 2025), and in April 2026 was studying broader bank powers and currency/infrastructure reform. No dedicated open-banking or BNPL regime is evident yet; these remain to be built out.

Syria - other topics

Last verified 5/25/2026 · Orientation, not legal advice - verify against the primary sources linked above. Explore the full world map →