UAE Banks Are Done Experimenting With Blockchain – Now They’re Making Money From It

The United Arab Emirates has crossed a threshold that most financial markets are still debating. Blockchain is no longer a pilot project sitting in a bank's innovation lab. It's live infrastructure, and it's generating revenue.
Key Takeaways
- The UAE has moved from blockchain pilots to live, revenue-generating banking products
Federal Decree Law No. 6 of 2025 places all virtual assets under Central Bank oversight, with fines up to $272M for non-compliance
The Digital Dirham CBDC and Project mBridge are already processing real cross-border transactions
UAE’s digital banking sector is projected to hit $175 billion by 2029
Major UAE banks have moved past the proof-of-concept stage. Emirates NBD – one of the region’s largest lenders – has poured over AED 1 billion into digital transformation, with more than 91% of its transactions now occurring through digital channels. The question in boardrooms is no longer whether to adopt blockchain rails, but how fast to scale them.
Stephen Richardson of Fireblocks put it plainly: what the industry predicted would happen in 2026 is already visible today – real money running on blockchain infrastructure. In this market, he warned, banks that move slowly don’t just fall behind. They lose.
A Regulatory Framework Built for Commitment
What separates the UAE from other jurisdictions isn’t just appetite. It’s legal clarity.
Federal Decree Law No. 6 of 2025, effective September 2025, handed the Central Bank of the UAE direct supervisory authority over the entire virtual asset ecosystem – decentralized finance protocols, wallets, stablecoins, and everything in between. Operating without a CBUAE license now carries fines of up to AED 1 billion, roughly $272 million. That’s not a warning. That’s a structural deterrent.
Alongside the federal framework, Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority and Abu Dhabi Global Market offer specialized licensing tracks for custody, exchange, and lending operations. The layered approach gives institutions multiple entry points while keeping systemic risk under centralized watch.
For banks, this matters enormously. Boards don’t commit capital to ambiguous regulatory environments. The UAE eliminated that ambiguity.
CBDCs and Cross-Border Settlement: Already Operational
The UAE isn’t waiting on theoretical use cases. Project mBridge – a multi-central-bank digital currency platform developed in collaboration with Hong Kong, Thailand, and China – reached minimum viable product stage in mid-2024. It enables instant, peer-to-peer international trade settlements without correspondent banking intermediaries.
In early 2024, the CBUAE completed its first government transaction over mBridge: AED 50 million, settled on-chain. A broader rollout of the Digital Dirham CBDC is expected by Q4 2025.
On the private side, Tether moved in August 2024 to launch a Dirham-backed stablecoin in partnership with local firms, targeting the remittance and trade corridors where the UAE sits as a natural hub.
What Comes Next
Over the next 12 to 18 months, the industry expects stablecoins, tokenized deposits, and crypto brokerage services to move into mainstream banking offerings across the UAE. These are no longer fringe products – they are becoming standard line items.
The numbers reflect the momentum. The UAE ranked among the highest globally in cryptocurrency adoption in 2024 across several institutional indices. Its digital banking sector is forecast to reach $175 billion by 2029, growing at a compound annual rate of 4.8%.
The infrastructure is in place. The regulation is signed. The first transactions have cleared. For the rest of the world’s banking sector, the UAE is no longer a case study in what’s possible – it’s a benchmark for what’s already done.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.









