Bank Alfalah Jingle Pay is now more than just a partnership headline, it is one of the clearest signals yet that Pakistan’s established commercial banks are moving aggressively into cross-border fintech. Bank Alfalah, a leading commercial bank in Pakistan with a network of over 1,000 branches, announced its acquisition of a 9.9% equity stake in Jingle Pay, one of the fastest-growing fintechs in the MENAP region. The deal, completed on January 9, 2025, gives the Karachi-headquartered bank a seat at the table of a UAE startup that has been quietly building one of the most active remittance pipelines into Pakistan.
What Is Jingle Pay and Why Does It Matter?
Jingle Pay specialises in cross-border money transfers and is licensed by the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA). Founded in 2019 by Amir Fardghassemi, Jingle Pay allows its users to store, spend, and send money to 160-plus countries in 99-plus currencies. Its product suite goes well beyond simple transfers. Jingle Pay provides multi-currency accounts, instant money transfers via the world’s first remittance marketplace, card payments, and last-mile payouts across 150-plus corridors in 99-plus currencies. Its Remittance-as-a-Service solution enables banks, fintechs, and non-financial institutions to facilitate seamless international money transfers.
The platform has proven it can move serious volumes. Jingle Pay’s proprietary AI-powered tech stack processed over 2 million transactions and facilitated over $1 billion in international money transfers in 2024, saving customers over $6 million in fees. In recognition of its impact on Pakistan specifically, Jingle Pay was recently awarded the top global fintech for remittances into Pakistan.
Its investor base reflects genuine institutional confidence. Investors include MoneyGram, G42-backed Applied AI, and prominent US venture capital firms known for backing global fintech giants like N26 and PayPal. MoneyGram acquired a 12% stake in Jingle Pay in 2022, and the two companies share payment rails that give Jingle Pay reach into over 200 countries. Jingle Pay is authorised and regulated by the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) as a provider and arranger of payment services, operating in accordance with the DFSA’s rules and regulatory framework to ensure compliance, security, and consumer protection within the UAE.
What the Bank Alfalah Jingle Pay Deal Actually Signals
This is not a passive financial investment. The Karachi-headquartered commercial bank will also join Jingle Pay’s board as part of the purchase. That board presence means Bank Alfalah has a direct voice in Jingle Pay’s strategic direction, a meaningful distinction from simply writing a cheque.
This collaboration leverages Bank Alfalah’s extensive infrastructure to amplify Jingle Pay’s impact on cross-border payments and digital banking, advancing its ambitious vision for the MENAP region. In plain terms, Jingle Pay gets a domestic banking backbone in Pakistan, while Bank Alfalah gains exposure to a fast-growing, AI-native payments platform without having to build one from scratch.
Farooq Khan, Group Head at Bank Alfalah, described the acquisition as a pivotal step in leading the ‘digital banking revolution,’ aiming to redefine cross-border financial services. The strategy has precedent within the bank: Bank Alfalah, with a network of over 1,000 branches across 200 cities, invested $1.7 million in Pakistani BNPL fintech QistBazaar in May 2023, acquiring a 7.2% equity stake. The Jingle Pay deal follows the same minority-stake, strategic-access playbook.
What This Means for Pakistan’s Remittance Corridor
The UAE-Pakistan remittance corridor is one of the most important in South Asia. Through Jingle Pay’s platform, 1.7 million Pakistani residents in the UAE can access faster, more secure, and cost-effective remittance services. Outward remittances surpassed $46 billion from the UAE, the second-largest market following the US for remittances, making the UAE a critical source of foreign exchange for Pakistan.
Jingle Pay, Pakistan’s fifth-largest remittance partner, plays a vital role in driving global financial flows that make a significant contribution to the country’s GDP. With Bank Alfalah’s infrastructure behind it, the startup is positioned to climb higher in that ranking.
Jingle Pay’s remittance marketplace model is set to transform UAE-Pakistan money transfers by enhancing transparency and competition. The company anticipates a shift toward fully integrated financial ecosystems where remittances become real-time, embedded, and increasingly cost-efficient, with transparency becoming an industry standard across high-volume corridors such as UAE-Pakistan.
This directly connects to the broader growth of digital payments inside Pakistan. The State Bank of Pakistan’s own instant payment system, Raast, processed 742 million transactions in Q1 2026 alone, a sign that the domestic infrastructure for receiving and routing digital payments is maturing fast, making a platform like Jingle Pay increasingly useful at the receiving end of international transfers.
Pakistan’s Unbanked Population: The Domestic Opportunity
The deal is not only about serving Pakistanis abroad. Jingle Pay plans to launch its digital banking services in Pakistan as a branchless banking mobile app targeting the country’s largely unbanked population. Pakistan’s financial inclusion gap remains significant, and a branchless mobile app backed by a large commercial bank’s compliance and infrastructure is a credible model for reaching populations that traditional branch networks cannot serve economically.
Jingle Pay’s branchless digital banking services in Pakistan target the largely unbanked population, and by integrating with Bank Alfalah’s infrastructure, the fintech aims to provide inclusive financial solutions to millions of customers.
This also puts Jingle Pay in competition with existing branchless banking players and digital wallet providers in Pakistan, adding pressure on the market to improve both cost and user experience. For Pakistani consumers, more competition in digital payments almost always translates into better rates and lower fees. For context on how digital finance is also reshaping public services, the KP cashless province initiative illustrates how appetite for digital-first financial access now extends beyond major urban centres.
Risks and Regulatory Considerations
Cross-border fintech partnerships between UAE and Pakistan-regulated entities carry real compliance complexity. Jingle Pay is authorised and regulated by the DFSA and operates in accordance with the DFSA’s rules and regulatory framework, ensuring its services meet compliance, security, and consumer protection standards within the UAE. Any branchless banking operations inside Pakistan also require State Bank of Pakistan authorisation, a regulatory layer that has historically slowed fintech market entry. Whether Jingle Pay’s Pakistan launch timeline stayed on schedule beyond Q1 2025 remains subject to those regulatory processes.
Currency risk is another variable. The PKR-AED exchange rate affects the real value of every remittance sent through the platform. Platforms that offer competitive, real-time exchange rates, as Jingle Pay’s marketplace model promises, give senders transparency that traditional hawala and bank-transfer channels often do not.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Bank Alfalah’s stake in Jingle Pay?
Bank Alfalah acquired a 9.90% stake in Jingle Pay on January 9, 2025, and completed the transaction on the same date. As part of the deal, the bank also secured a seat on Jingle Pay’s board of directors.
What does Jingle Pay do for Pakistani users?
Through Jingle Pay’s platform, 1.7 million Pakistani residents in the UAE can access faster, more secure, and cost-effective remittance services, with competitive PKR exchange rates and payout options including bank deposits, mobile wallets, and cash pickup points across Pakistan.
Is Jingle Pay regulated?
Jingle Pay is licensed by the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA), specialising in cross-border money transfers. This gives it regulatory credibility within the UAE and positions it as a compliant operator in one of the world’s most active remittance hubs.
How does this deal affect digital banking competition in Pakistan?
Bank Alfalah’s investment introduces a UAE-born, AI-native platform into Pakistan’s branchless banking space, adding a new competitor with international payment rails, MoneyGram’s global network, and an established diaspora user base. Jingle Pay’s expansion into Pakistan seeks to address the financial needs of the country’s largely unbanked population, and its local presence is expected to strengthen cross-border capabilities and solidify its position in the remittance ecosystem. That is a meaningful addition to a market where domestic players are still working to scale digital access beyond urban centres.













