JazzCash vs Easypaisa are now playing very different games in 2026

The JazzCash vs Easypaisa story in 2026 is no longer about two apps doing the same thing in different colours. Pakistan’s two biggest fintech platforms have quietly walked off in opposite directions, and the gap between their strategies is now impossible to ignore. One is racing to become an investment and payments super-app. The other just became a fully licensed bank. Understanding this split matters for every Pakistani who keeps money on their phone.

JazzCash vs Easypaisa: How the Split Happened

For years, both platforms were easy to describe in the same breath: mobile wallets you use to send money, pay bills, and top up your phone. That description no longer fits either of them accurately in 2026.

JazzCash processed PKR 16.8 trillion (approximately USD 59.7 billion) in gross transaction value in the twelve months ending March 31, 2026, up 56 percent year-on-year, as demand for digital payments, lending, and disbursement services continued to grow. To put that number in context, that is roughly equivalent to moving Pakistan’s entire annual federal budget through a single app, more than once.

The platform added ten million registered customers during the last twelve months, reaching 60 million by the end of March 2026, with 29.2 million customers active during Q1 2026.

Easypaisa took a different turn. The State Bank of Pakistan awarded its first Digital Retail Bank (DRB) license to Easypaisa digital bank, marking a significant milestone in the country’s efforts to expand financial services. The license authorises Easypaisa, formerly known as Telenor Microfinance Bank Limited, to launch banking operations aimed at promoting financial inclusion.

Easypaisa Digital Bank is jointly owned by Telenor Group, which holds a 55 percent stake, and Ant Group, a global leader in open internet platforms, which owns the remaining 45 percent. Ant Group is the company behind China’s Alipay, so Easypaisa has serious digital banking expertise behind it.

What JazzCash Is Building

JazzCash is pushing hard to go beyond simple payments. Its focus in 2026 is on three things: lending at scale, government services, and now investment products.

JazzCash enabled the issuance of 202,000 average loans per day in Q1 2026, extending formal credit to individuals and SMEs, including women-led enterprises that have historically operated outside formal financial channels.

Federal and provincial bodies also increasingly used JazzCash to collect citizen payments, including traffic challans, motorway tolls, and national identification fees, reflecting the accelerating shift toward cashless government services across Pakistan.

The biggest new move came in June 2026. JazzCash and Mobilink Bank introduced Government Treasury Bills directly through the JazzCash app, starting from as little as PKR 5,000. The initiative aims to reach one million active investors, working in coordination with the State Bank of Pakistan and the Ministry of Finance.

Government securities in Pakistan have traditionally been accessible only through banks and brokerages. Now, any eligible JazzCash customer can invest in 3-month Treasury Bills through a simple, secure journey built into an app they already use. Plans to extend access to longer-maturity Treasury Bills are already underway.

JazzCash still operates under a Branchless Banking charter and provides mobile wallet services in collaboration with Mobilink Microfinance Bank. It is not a bank itself, but it is quickly building bank-like services on top of that foundation.

What Easypaisa Is Building

Easypaisa’s strategy is more structural. By winning Pakistan’s first Digital Retail Bank licence, it can now do things that a wallet simply cannot: take deposits, offer housing loans, car financing, and long-term savings products, all fully regulated by the State Bank of Pakistan.

Irfan Wahab Khan, Chairman of Easypaisa Digital Bank’s Board, outlined the bank’s plans to facilitate remittances from overseas Pakistanis and provide housing and car financing loans.

Jahanzeb Khan, President and CEO of the bank, revealed that Easypaisa already serves 50 million customers, manages Rs 80 billion in deposits, and disburses 65,000 microloans daily through its mobile banking platform.

Easypaisa is now Pakistan’s first licensed digital bank, with 59 million registered users and 20 million monthly active users. In 2024 alone, Easypaisa processed 2.7 billion transactions worth Rs 9.5 trillion, a figure roughly equal to 9 percent of Pakistan’s entire GDP.

Easypaisa’s transition to a fully licensed digital bank means it will increasingly be a primary financial account for users, not just a supplementary wallet. That is a meaningful shift. A bank account and a wallet are very different things in the eyes of the regulator, and for the user, a bank account brings protection, interest on savings, and access to credit products that wallets cannot legally offer in the same way.

Why This Split Matters for Pakistan’s Digital Payments Future

Pakistan’s overall digital payments market is growing fast. According to the State Bank of Pakistan’s Annual Payment Systems Review, retail payment transactions reached 9.1 billion in FY2024-25, a 38 percent increase in volume year-on-year, with digital channels now accounting for 88 percent of all retail transactions.

In that context, the JazzCash vs Easypaisa split represents two valid but very different bets on where this market goes next. JazzCash is betting that the future belongs to a super-app that handles payments, loans, government services, and investments all from one place. Easypaisa is betting that people eventually want a real bank, one without branches, but with the full legal weight of a banking licence behind it.

Neither bet is wrong. In fact, both can win at the same time, because the two platforms are now serving slightly different needs. For daily personal use, Easypaisa often feels simpler and more convenient. For advanced needs, JazzCash offers more flexibility. Many people choose to keep accounts on both apps to cover all situations.

The broader winner, though, is Pakistan’s financial system. Half of Pakistan’s rural population lacks access to traditional banking services. Digital banking is necessary to bridge the gap and help MSMEs and other underserved segments, which could benefit significantly from digital financial services. Both platforms are pushing directly at that problem, just from different angles. You can learn more about how Pakistan’s startup and fintech ecosystem is attracting new capital in our coverage of Pakistani startups putting GCC expansion at the heart of their 2026 funding plans.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is JazzCash a bank?

No. JazzCash operates under a Branchless Banking charter and provides mobile wallet services in collaboration with Mobilink Microfinance Bank. It is not a licensed retail bank, though it offers many bank-like services such as loans and now investments.

Is Easypaisa now a real bank?

Yes. Easypaisa has become Pakistan’s first Digital Retail Bank to receive commercial approval for the commencement of regular digital banking operations from the State Bank of Pakistan. Approval was accorded on January 28, 2025, in an official licensing ceremony held at the State Bank of Pakistan.

How much does JazzCash process in transactions?

JazzCash has crossed 60 million registered customers, processing Rs 16.8 trillion (approximately USD 59.7 billion) in Gross Transaction Value in the 12 months ending March 31, 2026, up 56 percent year-on-year.

Can I buy government Treasury Bills on JazzCash?

Yes, as of June 2026 you can. JazzCash introduced Government Treasury Bills directly through the JazzCash app, starting from as little as PKR 5,000. The initiative aims to reach one million active investors, working in coordination with the State Bank of Pakistan and the Ministry of Finance. The product is handled by Mobilink Bank as the regulated custodian.

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