While digital payments in Pakistan continue to grow rapidly, a major challenge persists: high-value transactions remain largely paper-based.
According to the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), this trend reflects lingering concerns around trust, usability, and accessibility in digital payment systems for large transfers.
In its Quarterly Payment Systems Review for Q3 FY25, SBP revealed that 89% of all retail transactions were conducted digitally. Yet, these accounted for just 29% of the total transaction value, around Rs48 trillion out of Rs164 trillion.
In contrast, over-the-counter (OTC) and paper-based transactions, despite comprising only 11% of the volume, represented a massive 71% of the total transaction value. This disparity highlights the ongoing reliance on physical channels for larger payments.
Digital platforms are seeing solid growth in both users and transaction activity.
Legacy systems like call centers and IVR-based banking are becoming obsolete, raising concerns about financial accessibility for less tech-savvy users.
E-commerce payments saw a 40% jump in volume to 213 million transactions and a 34% increase in value to Rs258 billion.
SBP’s real-time payment infrastructures are playing a vital role:
However, Raast’s person-to-merchant (P2M) feature is still underutilized, recording just 1.5 million transactions worth Rs4.5 billion, despite the onboarding of 770,000 merchants.
Challenges to Full Digital Adoption
Despite steady progress, key obstacles remain:
These challenges continue to limit financial inclusion and widespread digital adoption, despite SBP’s policy initiatives and growing participation from banks, fintechs, and service providers.