Egyptian startup Wuilt raised $2 million to roll out completely free website building tools across the region, ditching traditional subscription models that have kept millions of entrepreneurs offline.
The Cairo-based company made waves in April 2025 when it eliminated all monthly fees in Egypt. Over 20,000 new merchants joined within weeks. Now Wuilt plans to repeat this success across the UAE, GCC countries, and Turkey by early 2026.
Bold Move Creates Digital Gold Rush in Egypt
Wuilt founders Ahmed Rostom and Mahmoud Metwaly took a massive financial risk when they decided to make their platform completely free. The move cost them hundreds of thousands of dollars in recurring revenue, but the payoff came fast.
“We didn’t pivot just to grow, we pivoted to make growth possible for everyone else,” Rostom told investors. The numbers back up his confidence. Egypt’s e-commerce adoption jumped as cost barriers disappeared overnight.
The strategy works because Wuilt shifted from charging monthly fees to earning through services like payment processing, shipping, and digital wallets. Small merchants only pay when they make money, aligning Wuilt’s success with their customers’ growth.

UAE Launch Sets Stage for Gulf Domination
The UAE rollout in Q4 2025 represents Wuilt’s first major international expansion. UAE e-commerce is expected to exceed $8 billion by 2025, with high internet penetration and business-friendly regulations.
Success in the UAE opens doors to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman. These markets collectively represent millions of small businesses looking to go digital. Many have waited years for affordable, Arabic-friendly solutions.
Turkey joins the expansion in early 2026, adding a bridge market between Europe and Asia. The country’s 84 million people and growing digital economy create another massive opportunity for Wuilt’s free platform.
AI Features Give Small Merchants Enterprise-Level Tools
Beyond geographic expansion, Wuilt develops AI-powered features that level the playing field for small businesses. These tools provide inventory management, sales analytics, and marketing insights typically available only to large companies.
The AI features analyze customer behavior and suggest improvements to boost sales. Small merchants get data-driven recommendations without hiring expensive consultants or buying complex software.
This positions Wuilt as more than a website builder, it becomes a complete business intelligence platform. The company calls this vision becoming “foundational infrastructure” for emerging market entrepreneurs.
Revenue Model Aligns Platform Success with Merchant Growth
Wuilt’s new business model creates powerful incentives. Instead of collecting fixed monthly fees regardless of merchant success, the company earns through transaction-based services.
Wuilt Pay processes payments and takes small transaction fees. Wuilt Shipments handles logistics for a service charge. Wuilt Wallet manages finances with usage-based pricing. All optional services scale with merchant volume.
This approach means Wuilt only profits when merchants succeed. The alignment encourages the platform to provide better tools and support, since merchant failure directly hurts Wuilt’s revenue.
Investors Double Down on Regional Expansion Strategy
The $2 million funding round attracted heavy hitters from across the region. Flat6Labs and MTF VC led the round, with participation from Hub71, JIMCO (Abdul Latif Jameel’s venture arm), and Purity Tech.
Hub71 brings UAE market knowledge, while JIMCO adds Saudi connections. This backing positions Wuilt to navigate complex regulatory environments across multiple countries.
Previous investors doubled down too. Flat6Labs, which led Wuilt’s 2020 seed round, increased their stake after seeing the free model’s explosive growth in Egypt.
Free Platform Targets Massive MENA E-commerce Boom
The MENA e-commerce market hit $34.5 billion in 2024 and could reach $57.8 billion by 2029, according to Digital Commerce 360 data. The GCC alone projects $33.3 billion in e-commerce revenue by 2025.
Small businesses drive most of this growth but face major barriers. Traditional website builders charge monthly fees that many can’t afford. Language barriers compound the problem. Most platforms poorly support Arabic text or regional business needs.
Wuilt solves both issues. The platform handles Arabic, English, French, and Turkish languages. More importantly, it’s built specifically for regional business practices and payment methods.
Regional Competition Heats Up as Free Model Spreads
Wuilt’s free strategy puts pressure on regional competitors still charging monthly fees. Traditional SaaS companies must now justify subscription costs when entrepreneurs can build professional websites for free.
The competition extends beyond regional players. Global platforms like Shopify and Wix face new challenges in MENA markets where price sensitivity runs high. Wuilt’s Arabic-first approach and regional payment integrations create additional competitive advantages.
This dynamic could reshape how SaaS companies approach emerging markets. The subscription model that works in wealthy countries may prove unsustainable where entrepreneurs operate on thin margins.
Future Plans Include Pan-Regional Business Platform
Wuilt’s vision extends beyond website building to comprehensive business support. The company plans to add more AI-driven features, expanded payment options, and deeper e-commerce integrations.
The ultimate goal involves creating a one-stop platform where small businesses can build websites, process payments, manage inventory, ship products, and analyze performance all through a single Arabic-friendly interface.
This comprehensive approach could make Wuilt indispensable to millions of regional entrepreneurs. As the platform adds users across multiple countries, network effects should strengthen its competitive position.
The success of this expansion will test whether the freemium model can work at scale across diverse markets. If successful, Wuilt could become the dominant small business platform across the entire MENA region.
 
 






 