Visa will begin operations in Syria after reaching an agreement with the Central Bank of Syria to rebuild the country’s digital payments infrastructure. The announcement appeared in a joint statement on 4 December 2025. It marks the first time a global payments network has re-entered Syria since 2011, when sanctions pushed major processors out of the market.
According to Reuters, the partnership allows Syrian banks to issue Visa cards and support digital wallets for everyday use. Visa will also roll out tools for merchants, including QR payments and Tap-to-Phone acceptance. These features will help businesses begin taking electronic payments without expensive equipment.
Visa says the rollout will follow global security standards such as EMV chip technology and tokenisation. This step brings the country closer to secure domestic payments and, over time, gives Syrians the ability to make purchases internationally. The project fits into Syria’s broader effort to modernise a financial system that has relied almost entirely on cash for more than a decade.
Why This Shift Matters For Syria’s Financial Recovery
Syria’s cash-heavy economy has created major barriers for consumers and merchants. Cash payments limit transparency, increase daily risk and complicate business operations. Visa’s return offers a path toward stronger financial trust and more efficient transactions. It also signals that external partners see progress in Syria’s economic reforms.
A statement from Visa’s regional office captured the intention behind the move, noting that the company aims to “build a modern, secure and scalable digital payments ecosystem for Syria.” Analysts cited in The New Arab added that reconnecting to global payment rails could encourage more formal business activity across the country.
As electronic payments gain traction, millions of Syrians may find daily life easier. Digital tools reduce the need to carry large amounts of cash and give small businesses an affordable way to accept payments.
Who Will Experience The Impact First
Consumers will gain access to bank-issued Visa cards, digital wallets and more reliable ways to pay. Merchants, especially smaller shops and service providers, will be able to accept electronic payments without investing in traditional point-of-sale hardware.
Local banks will need to upgrade systems and meet Visa’s compliance requirements. Regulators overseeing the rollout will guide consumer-protection measures and ensure the system develops safely.
What Comes Next As The Rollout Begins
The launch will happen in phases. Banks will start issuing cards and onboarding customers, while merchant tools roll out city by city. Visa plans to monitor adoption and expand services as infrastructure strengthens.
The Central Bank says digital payments will become a core part of Syria’s long-term economic recovery strategy, signalling a shift toward more formal and connected financial activity across the country.











