Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Not yet time to write off UAE cheque payments

Cheques are 'still a fundamental thing for people' in the UAE but their use is diminishing Pexels/Cottonbro Studio
Cheques are 'still a fundamental thing for people' in the UAE but their use is diminishing
  • UAE cheque use is dropping
  • ‘Legacy’ method in some sectors
  • 99% of payments are digital

Cheque books are on their way out in the UAE, but experts have said there is still some way to go before they are signed off for good.

The number of cheques cleared through the country’s banks has fallen from 26 million in 2019 to just over 20 million for the first 11 months of 2023, according to the latest data from the Central Bank of the UAE.

“It’s dropping off, but we’re in the tail,” Joel Van Dusen, group head of corporate and investment banking at Mashreq Bank, told AGBI.

The UAE is in the middle of its National Payments Systems Strategy rollout, to improve payment infrastructure and encourage the adoption of electronic methods, including e-cheques.

It forms part of wider plans to shift to a paperless economy, promoting digital payments and reducing physical currency and cheque usage.

Australia announced last year that it plans to end the use of cheques by 2030 as part of reforms to drive digitalisation.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore, meanwhile, declared that all corporate cheques will be eliminated by the end of 2025, although individuals will still be able to use cheques for a period after next year.

In the UAE, Van Dusen said, around 99 percent of payments by companies with Mashreq were made digitally.

However, he said that cheques remained a legacy payment method in certain sectors in the UAE, particularly education providers and the real estate industry.

Mashreq is working with the Dubai Land Department to introduce more digitalisation into the process.

“It’s still such a fundamental thing for people,” Van Dusen said. “You could do maybe automated debits instead of post-dated cheques so it will happen; it’s just going to take time.”

Almost 90 percent of consumers in the UAE used at least one emerging payment in 2022 – such as “wearables”, biometrics, digital wallets and currencies, and QR codes – according to the New Payments Index from Mastercard.

“In my experience, demand for cheques is often borne out of habit,” said Ranojoy K Dutta, head of transactional banking, UAE at HSBC Bank Middle East. “But we know that when customers are offered digital solutions that consider all their needs and their ways of doing business, the transition away from paper processes can be pleasantly straightforward.”

Latest articles

Qatar LNG

Qatar bullish on LNG as it plans increased production

Qatar’s energy minister said he is bullish on global demand for liquefied natural gas and his country is likely to push its production levels beyond those already targeted for 2030. “Technical capability is going to be assessed, and if there is more [gas], we probably will do more,” Saad Sherida Al Kaabi said at the […]

Bayanat says its AID data platform provided information to authorities during April's flooding in Dubai

Bayanat increases funding for climate disaster R&D

Geospatial services provider Bayanat has increased its investment into climate disaster research and development following a strong profit rise in the first quarter of 2024. Abu Dhabi-based Bayanat said gross profit for the first quarter reached AED32 million ($8.7 million), representing a gross margin of 28 percent. Revenues were 12 percent up to AED113 million.  […]

RwandAir CEO Yvonne Manzi Makolo said in Doha: 'Addis is already a huge hub but Kigali will be an alternative regional hub, especially given the geographical position of Rwanda'

Qatar and Rwanda to open airport in ‘heart of Africa’ by 2028

Qatar Airways and RwandAir will open a major international airport in Rwanda’s capital Kigali by 2028, the airlines said this week. The Qatari flag carrier has also announced plans to take a stake in a southern African airline to cement its expansion plans on the continent.  RwandAir and Qatar Airways, which have a code-sharing agreement, […]

Tourists photograph the Abu Dhabi skyline. Travel funding is small compared to how much tourism contributes to the economy

Travel startups seen as ‘high risk’ by VC investors

The co-founder and CEO of Dharma, an Abu Dhabi business travel management platform, has claimed the tourism sector isn’t seen as attractive enough for investors.  Dharma, which was one of the first startups accepted into Abu Dhabi’s Hub71 incubation programme, closed a $4.7 million Series A funding round last year. “I think for venture capital […]