Uber is investing $200 million over the next five years to establish a new global technology hub in Istanbul, its fourth outside the United States after Brazil, India, and the Netherlands. The announcement on 31 October 2025, made alongside Turkey’s Minister of Industry and Technology Mehmet Fatih Kacır, highlights how the country is positioning itself as a base for multinational software development.
The new centre will handle software engineering, mapping, and product innovation for Uber’s global operations. Dara Khosrowshahi said Turkey’s growing digital economy and engineering talent make it an ideal location for the company’s next phase of growth.
This move reinforces Turkey’s emergence as a contributor to the global technology workforce and deepens its role in the software supply chain.
Why Turkey, and Why Now
Turkey has spent the past decade building the capacity to attract research and development work. Data from the Turkish Statistical Institute shows the country graduates roughly 100 000 engineers each year, while technology exports reach about $10 billion in 2024.
Government programmes such as the Technology Development Zones and the Investment Office of Turkey provide tax relief and R&D grants to foreign companies that hire locally. These policies, reinforced through recent partnerships with global firms, have turned Istanbul into a serious contender for international R&D investment.
The results are very visible. Siemens, Huawei, and Ericsson already operate engineering and innovation centres in the city, and Turkish software firms are exporting more products across Europe and the Middle East. Uber’s arrival confirms what was already known, Turkey is evolving from a consumer market into a regional production base for global technology.

Global Tech Is Decentralising Development
Uber’s move fits a broader pattern across the tech industry. Global companies are spreading their engineering and research operations beyond traditional hubs like Silicon Valley and London. Firms such as Amazon, Google, and Microsoft have all expanded engineering or data operations across the Middle East, Africa, and South Asia.
The rationale is to diversify innovation pipelines, access skilled but less costly talent, and reduce dependency on single-market regulations. Dara Khosrowshahi’s remarks about Turkey’s engineering strength echo a wider shift where global firms now treat software development like supply-chain management – distributed, risk-balanced, and regionally specialised.
Turkey’s emergence as a credible player mirrors what happened in India in the early 2000s. A generation of affordable engineers combined with targeted incentives helped India turn contract software into a national export. With its universities, cost base, and regional reach, Turkey appears poised to follow that trajectory.
Regional Implications for the Middle East
Istanbul’s growing status as a technology hub has implications beyond Turkey’s borders. The city’s location and talent pool position it as a link between Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa, a role that could influence how regional investment flows evolve.
Neighbouring countries such as the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have poured billions into digital infrastructure and innovation zones, yet much of their focus has been on attracting corporate headquarters, not building large-scale development centres. Turkey’s model shows another path: nurture domestic talent and make it exportable.
Analysts note that Uber’s hub could attract engineers from nearby markets such as Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon, offering competitive pay without relocating to Western Europe. For the wider region, that could slow the long-standing “talent drain” to the US and Europe.
What This Means for Uber, and for the Region
For Uber, the Istanbul centre consolidates its identity as more than a mobility company. The hub will support global operations in mapping, logistics, and artificial intelligence, effectively turning the firm into a distributed technology network rather than a centralised app developer.
For Turkey, the investment validates its strategy of coupling state incentives with private-sector credibility. If the Istanbul hub delivers on its promise, it could anchor new supply chains for fintech, logistics tech, and autonomous systems across the Middle East.
The regional effect could be deeper as a successful model in Turkey may encourage other governments to shift from funding consumer-facing startups to attracting enterprise-grade R&D. If that happens, Uber’s investment won’t just be a milestone for Turkey, it will mark the moment the Middle East’s tech map began to redraw itself.








