The United Arab Emirates has, in theory, already unlocked crypto payments.
Since 2025, regulation in the UAE has made stablecoin-based payments legally possible — but only under one strict condition: the stablecoin must be backed by the UAE dirham (AED). That single requirement quietly shaped everything. It created legal clarity on paper, but no usable payment reality in practice.
The missing piece was simple: there was no regulated AED-backed stablecoin living natively on a public blockchain. So while the rulebook allowed crypto payments, the actual instrument to spend never existed in a practical form.
That gap is now starting to close with AEDZ by Zand — a regulated, AED-backed stablecoin reportedly issued under UAE oversight, deployed on Ethereum and already tradable on platforms like Bybit. For the first time, the technical foundation for compliant on-chain AED payments is emerging.
But there is a catch, and it is the most important one.
Holding a stablecoin is not the same as spending it.
Today, no major merchant in the UAE accepts AEDZ at checkout. The asset exists, the regulation exists, and the rails exist — but the payment layer is still missing. In other words, the system is legally enabled but commercially incomplete.
This is where the real shift will happen.
The next phase is not about issuance, but integration. Payments only become real when checkout flows change — when users are no longer asked “Visa or Mastercard,” but “wallet or card.” And in the UAE, for the first time, that transition is technically and regulatorily within reach.
It is one of the rare markets where the stack is not the bottleneck anymore. Distribution is.
Watch this space — because once crypto stops being something you hold and starts being something you select at checkout, the card duopoly will not disappear. It will simply become optional.
The post The UAE Can Finally Pay With Crypto — Theoretically appeared first on Bitcoin News Asia.


