The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) fintech sector saw remarkable growth in 2025, with total funding reaching US$1.14 billion, an increase of around 80% year-on-year. The UAE, particularly Dubai and Abu Dhabi, along with Egypt, emerged as the dominant hubs, collectively accounting for over 65% of disclosed deal value. This momentum was fueled by supportive regulatory frameworks, growing demand for digital payments, buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) solutions, embedded finance, and cross-border remittances, as well as record M&A activity, including high-profile exits exceeding US$500 million in total value.
However, the escalation of regional conflict in early 2026 has introduced significant uncertainty. Travel restrictions and heightened security measures have disrupted in-person due diligence for international investors, while many funds have paused or slowed new capital deployments due to increased geopolitical risk. Valuation pressures have emerged, with late-stage funding rounds facing 20–35% discounts, and founders anticipating exits or follow-on rounds are encountering delays, increasing pressure on cash management. These factors have collectively slowed cross-border deal-making, particularly involving European, US, or Asian capital.
Despite these near-term challenges, the fundamentals of the MENA fintech market remain strong. Analysts continue to forecast approximately 35% annual revenue growth through 2028, driven by high smartphone penetration, persistent unmet financial inclusion needs affecting over 150 million adults, regulatory support for digital innovation, and substantial domestic capital from sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and regional VC firms. These structural drivers indicate that while deal activity may moderate in 2026, long-term revenue growth and market expansion are likely to continue.
The current environment is expected to produce a selective investment landscape and consolidation opportunities. Investors are likely to focus on resilient, infrastructure-oriented platforms such as payment rails, embedded finance, regtech, and open-banking enablers, while consumer-facing BNPL and digital lending models may face increased scrutiny unless they demonstrate strong metrics. Distressed or capital-constrained fintechs could become acquisition targets, particularly in payments, neobanking, and SME-focused solutions. GCC-based investors are poised to fill capital gaps where international funds hesitate, reinforcing regional leadership.
In summary, the 2026 conflict has created short-term friction for MENA fintech deal-making through travel constraints, investor caution, and valuation pressures. Yet, strong digital adoption, financial inclusion gaps, and regulatory continuity continue to underpin robust revenue growth forecasts. The sector is expected to see a strategic shift toward selective, infrastructure-focused investments and consolidation, with stronger players leveraging regional capital to emerge even more dominant once stability returns. The record US$1.14 billion funding of 2025 may mark the peak of this cycle, but long-term structural opportunities remain solid.






