UAE FinTech Series: FinTech without friction – The UAE way

The United Arab Emirates (“UAE”) has become the leading FinTech hub in the Middle East. Through bold regulation, access to global capital, and strategic free zones, it is a magnet for startups, scale-ups, and financial institutions aiming for growth in digital finance.

In Part 1 of our FinTech Series, we lay out the ecosystem, key regulators, and market entry routes to help you establish in the UAE.

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Related Practice Areas
Financial Services
Related Industries
Fintech
Locations
UAE
Date
July 30, 2025

Why the UAE?

 

The UAE offers FinTech companies more than just a commercial base — it provides a regulatory environment designed for growth.

  • Regulatory clarity from the start: Whether one is offering crypto custody, issuing tokenised products, processing payments, or advising on investments, the UAE offers licensing frameworks that are structured, accessible, and transparent.
  • A launchpad for regional and global scale: Firms based in the UAE can access the GCC, MENA, Africa, and beyond — supported by cross-border business structures, investor appetite, and regulatory openness.
  • Active support for digital finance models: Across Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Ras Al Khaimah, regulators have launched frameworks that recognise crypto-assets, tokenisation, and embedded payments as legitimate activities — not legal grey areas.
  • Practical pathways to market: From sandbox licences to specialised Free Zones, the UAE allows FinTech businesses to enter, test, and scale with clear legal boundaries and proactive supervisory engagement.

Key free zones and regulators

 

Zone Regulator Specialisation
Dubai International Financial Centre (“DIFC”) Dubai Financial Services Authority (“DFSA”) Investment services, tokenised assets, funds, payments
Abu Dhabi Global Market (“ADGM”) Financial Services Regulatory Authority (“FSRA”) Institutional FinTech, crypto-assets, private banking
Dubai (excluding DIFC) Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (“VARA”) Virtual assets and VASPs; applies to Dubai mainland and all other Dubai free zones
Mainland UAE (including other free zones) Central Bank of the UAE (“CB UAE”) and Securities and Commodities Authority (“SCA”) Payment institutions, securities, crowdfunding
Ras Al Khaimah Digital Assets Oasis (“RAK DAO”) Ras Al Khaimah Digital Assets Oasis Authority DeFi, Web3 products, DAPPs and proprietary trading

Each zone has unique licensing, activity scope, and regulatory expectations — so choosing the right jurisdiction is vital.

 

FinTech-focused innovation and tokenisation opportunities

 

Across the UAE, regulators are not just enabling FinTech — they are actively testing and scaling real-world use cases.

Here’s what’s actually happening on the ground:

🏠

Real estate tokenisation is live

Prypco and the Dubai Land Department recently completed a tokenised villa sale with 169 investors — all executed via blockchain in under five minutes. VARA is now expanding tokenisation pilots to include gold and other physical assets.

💳

Crypto meets commerce

Emirates Airline has partnered with Crypto.com to launch crypto payments for flight bookings, highlighting the UAE’s openness to real-world crypto adoption.

🧪

Regulatory sandboxes with scale

The DFSA’s 2025 tokenisation sandbox attracted over 90 applicants to explore on-chain financial instruments. ADGM’s RegLab continues to support cross-border and early-stage models.

Real-time payment rails

The Central Bank’s Aani platform enables instant 24/7 payments via mobile number or QR, creating real infrastructure for open banking and embedded finance providers.

🌐

Ecosystem momentum

Dubai’s crypto and FinTech ecosystem now includes over 230 blockchain projects and 70+ venture funds. Global players like Paymentology have launched regional operations to serve MENA from the UAE.

 

For further information please contact [email protected]

Galyna Podoprikhina
About the author

Galyna Podoprikhina

Galyna is a Senior Associate at WH Partners, forming part of the FinTech, Intellectual Property and Gaming & Gambling teams. She is listed in the Associates to Watch category of the Chambers Fintech 2025 guide.

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About the author

Nicholas Scerri

Nicholas Scerri joined WH Partners as a Junior Associate in July 2025.

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