Haball B2B payments fintech has closed a landmark $52 million pre-Series A round, making it the biggest raise of its kind in Pakistan’s startup history. The deal is split between a $5 million equity portion and a $47 million strategic financing component, a hybrid structure that sets it apart from almost every other funding round in the country. Here is a plain-English breakdown of what happened, why it is unusual, and what it means for Pakistani businesses and the broader fintech sector.
What is Haball and what does it do?
Haball is a Karachi-based fintech founded in 2017 by Omer bin Ahsan. It sits inside the supply chain, the chain of manufacturers, distributors, and retailers that move goods across the country. Most of these businesses still rely on paper invoices, cash-in-envelopes, and payment cycles that can stretch for weeks. Haball replaces all of that with a digital platform.
The platform covers four things in one place: digital invoicing, payment collection, tax compliance, and working capital financing. And all of it is shariah-compliant, meaning it follows Islamic finance rules and does not use interest-based products.
Who uses it? Customers include SMEs across Pakistan as well as multinationals such as Coca-Cola, operating in sectors including retail, consumer goods, pharmaceuticals, energy, and aerospace. In total, Haball serves nearly 8,000 small and medium-sized enterprises across Pakistan and has processed over $3 billion in payments and disbursed more than $110 million in financing through its platform.
Breaking down the Haball B2B payments funding round
The $52 million raise is technically a pre-Series A, meaning it comes before a full Series A venture round. But the number is unusually large for this stage, and the structure is what makes it truly different.
- Equity ($5 million): The equity component was led by Zayn VC, a Pakistani venture capital firm. Other investors included Majlis Advisory SPV, several leading private investors in Saudi Arabia, angel investors, and a business conglomerate.
- Strategic financing ($47 million): The strategic financing component was provided by Meezan Bank Limited, Pakistan’s first and largest Islamic bank, rated AAA/A-1+.
It is important to understand that the $47 million is not a grant or equity, it is bank debt, structured in shariah-compliant form. This component came from Meezan Bank in the form of strategic financing, arriving in tranches into Haball’s bank account over a few years. Meezan’s backing not only provides capital but also validates Haball’s shariah-compliant operating model, something particularly relevant as the company looks toward expansion in the Gulf.
Why the hybrid funding model is unusual
Most Pakistani startup rounds are pure equity, a VC gives money in exchange for a share of the company. Debt financing from a major bank at this scale, packaged alongside equity into one headline number, is rare. The deal is significant not just for its size but also because it represents one of the most notable tie-ups to date between an incumbent Pakistani lender and a digital upstart.
The round included bank-linked debt financing, and that is a structural signal: when a startup market starts opening non-equity funding routes, it gets more mature. Debt is also harder to get than equity, a bank will only lend if it believes the business can repay. That makes Meezan’s participation a strong vote of confidence in Haball’s actual cash flows, not just its story.
Haball raised this capital incrementally over the past few years, with each tranche closely aligned to specific milestones, whether revenue growth, product development, regulatory compliance, or deploying sales teams to onboard clients. The company chose to announce the complete raise only now, signalling that it is entering a new phase of growth. This approach protected Haball’s cap table by reducing dilution and allowed it to build a business that tracks positive unit economics from the very beginning.
The problem Haball is solving for Pakistani SMEs
Pakistan has a serious credit gap. Supply chain finance in Pakistan is nascent but is expected to be worth more than $9 billion, driven by the severe financing gap faced by the country’s SMEs, less than 5% can access financing from commercial banks. That means the vast majority of small businesses have no formal way to borrow money to buy stock, pay suppliers, or grow.
Haball plans to use the funding to deepen its infrastructure across payments, invoicing, and financing. The goal is to build a financial backbone that supports the businesses making up 60% of Pakistan’s GDP, manufacturers, distributors, and retailers, making it easier for them to send invoices, receive payments, and access financing.
On the regulatory side, Haball has made significant progress. Haball is the first fintech in Pakistan to receive a licence for digital invoicing from the Federal Board of Revenue and has been recognised by the State Bank of Pakistan as a multi-bank supply chain financing platform. More recently, Haball secured in-principle approval from the State Bank of Pakistan for a Payment System Operator/Payment Service Provider (PSO/PSP) licence. As a PSO/PSP, it can process and settle transactions instantly, update payment statuses, and notify both parties in real time, eliminating manual reconciliation and reducing delays.
What it signals for Pakistan’s fintech ecosystem in 2026
Pakistan’s fintech funding went through a difficult period after the 2021 boom. Pakistan saw a 2021 boom of about $310, 350 million, followed by a sharp drop and then a $58 million Q2 2025 rebound, with stronger attention on cash flow, governance, and clear business models.
Haball’s raise is the standout deal of that recovery. As of late 2025, Pakistan’s 450 fintech companies had in total raised $391 million in VC money. A single deal accounting for $52 million of that total speaks to the scale of what Haball has built. The uptick in Pakistan’s fintech funding also dovetails with growing regulatory support for the industry, including the state-backed Pakistan Startup Fund, which offers equity-free grants to encourage venture capital inflows.
The story also ties into Pakistan’s push for broader financial inclusion. Collectively, these regulatory efforts aim to boost adult financial inclusion from the 64% rate in 2023 to 75% by 2028. Haball’s Haball B2B payments model, focused on the supply chain, is a core piece of that puzzle, because when businesses can move money faster and more transparently, the whole economy benefits. You can read more about how Pakistan’s tech sector is growing in our piece on Pakistan IT exports hitting a record high in FY26.
Eyes on the GCC
With the domestic foundation in place, Haball is now looking outward. The proceeds will be used to support its planned expansion into the GCC to cater to the market demand for Sharia-compliant SME-focused digital financial services, besides consolidating its domestic market leadership in Pakistan. Islamic supply chain financing is still in its early stages in the GCC, and Haball sees a major opportunity. With a homegrown, fully Shariah-compliant platform already tested and scaled in Pakistan, the company is well-positioned to meet the growing demand for ethical, interest-free financing options in the region.
In 2025, the company plans to enter Saudi Arabia, with a regional office in the pipeline, while also exploring additional market entries across the Middle East, particularly the UAE and Qatar, as well as broader opportunities in Asia.
Frequently Asked Questions
What exactly is the Haball $52 million pre-Series A round?
It is a funding round that combines two types of capital: $5 million in equity led by Zayn VC, and $47 million in strategic bank financing from Meezan Bank. Together they total $52 million, making it Pakistan’s largest pre-Series A raise to date for a fintech.
Why did Haball B2B payments use bank debt instead of raising all equity?
Bank debt lets a founder raise capital without giving away more shares of the company. For Haball, partnering with Meezan Bank also provided shariah-compliant financing that matches its product model and strengthens its credibility with Islamic finance markets in the Gulf. It signals that the business has real, bankable revenues.
Who are the key investors in this round?
The equity component of $5 million was led by Zayn VC. Other investors included Majlis Advisory SPV, several leading private investors in KSA, angel investors, and a prominent business conglomerate. The $47 million strategic financing was provided by Meezan Bank Limited, Pakistan’s first and largest Islamic bank.
What does this mean for small businesses in Pakistan?
As a licensed payment initiation service provider, Haball can connect securely with a distributor’s bank via Raast, Pakistan’s instant payment system, to request payment authorization. The distributor authenticates the transaction via OTP or biometric verification and the payment is initiated immediately, without the need to log into their bank’s portal or app. For small businesses, this means faster payments, digital invoices, and access to financing they could not get from a traditional bank.
