⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria has 57% of adults unbanked, yet EDAHABIA card holders grew to 14.3 million by end of 2024 and digital transactions surged 71% in Q1 2024. Bank of Algeria Instruction 06-2025 formally authorizes PSP agent networks through existing retail businesses, while Yassir’s March 2026 Uno hypermarket acquisition creates owned physical touchpoints for Yassir Cash payments — together building the infrastructure for a proximity banking model that can leapfrog traditional branch expansion.

Bottom Line: Algerian PSPs seeking first-mover advantage should begin retail agent network negotiations in parallel with their Instruction 06-2025 licensing process — waiting for a license before building agent pipeline is the most common and costly strategic mistake in agent banking rollouts.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

With 57% of adults unbanked, agent banking is among the highest-impact financial policy areas in Algeria — Instruction 06-2025 makes it immediately actionable for licensed PSPs and retail partners.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

PSP licensing under Instruction 06-2025 is underway and the 2026 sandbox will open new entrants; the agent network buildout is a 2026-2027 execution priority for early-mover PSPs.
Key Stakeholders
PSP operators, retail business owners, Algérie Poste, Bank of Algeria, unbanked adults, wilaya-level retail chains
Decision Type
Strategic

Agent banking represents a structural architecture decision — the PSPs and retailers that move first establish distribution advantages that are very difficult to reverse.
Priority Level
High

The combination of regulatory authorization, private-sector momentum from Yassir, and a 57% unbanked population creates a convergence that is unlikely to remain open indefinitely as competition intensifies.

Quick Take: Algerian PSPs seeking a first-mover agent network advantage should begin retail partnership negotiations in parallel with their licensing process under Instruction 06-2025 — waiting for a license before building agent pipeline is the single most common strategic mistake in agent banking rollouts. Retail businesses in underserved wilayas should evaluate the PSP agent role as a commission-bearing revenue stream before first-mover PSPs complete their network buildout.

The Scale of the Problem and the Shape of the Opportunity

Algeria’s banking gap is not a rounding error. With 57% of adults holding no bank account, Algeria sits significantly above the global average for financial exclusion, and the causes are structural: a branch network concentrated in urban centers, documentation requirements that exclude informal-sector workers, and a cultural preference for cash built over decades in which formal financial services were inaccessible or unnecessary for everyday life.

The conventional response to a banking gap is to build more banks. Algeria pursued a version of this with Algérie Poste, which became the country’s de facto financial inclusion infrastructure through the EDAHABIA prepaid card. By the end of 2024, EDAHABIA card holders reached 14.3 million — a substantial base built through postal office distribution. Digital transactions across Algeria surged 71% in Q1 2024, reflecting genuine momentum in digital payment adoption even within a mostly unbanked adult population.

But EDAHABIA, while structurally important, has limitations. It is a prepaid card, not a full financial services platform. It does not offer savings accounts, credit, or the digital wallet capabilities that allow users to transact without visiting a physical branch or post office. The gap it fills is real — it gives unbanked Algerians a card — but the gap it leaves is also real: it does not give them a financial services relationship that builds credit history, supports savings, or enables full digital commerce participation.

Agent banking — the model in which licensed payment service providers extend their reach through authorized agents operating within existing retail businesses — offers a structurally different approach. Rather than building new infrastructure, it leverages existing distribution: grocery stores, pharmacies, mobile phone retailers, corner shops. The agent acts as a human interface to digital financial services, enabling account opening, deposits, withdrawals, and payments for customers who may never visit a bank branch.

The Bank of Algeria’s Instruction N° 06–2025, issued August 17, 2025, provides the formal legal basis for agent banking in Algeria for the first time. The instruction explicitly authorizes PSPs to appoint payment service agents through existing retail businesses. Crucially, the PSP remains fully liable for agent activities — including AML training and transaction monitoring. This allocation of liability is important: it ensures that agents are not operating in a regulatory vacuum, but under the direct accountability of a licensed entity that has met the instruction’s 160 million DZD minimum capital requirement and fund segregation standards.

The agent network authorization is paired with the instruction’s three-tier wallet system. A Level 1 digital wallet — requiring only basic digital identification and supporting balances up to 100,000 DZD (approximately $740 USD) — is the appropriate entry-level product for unbanked adults being onboarded through an agent. The KYC requirement is minimal enough to be achievable without a formal banking history, and the balance limit is appropriate for the daily financial needs of users transitioning from cash. As users build their financial history, they can graduate to Level 2 or Level 3 accounts with higher balance ceilings and access to a broader range of services.

The architecture is coherent: a licensed PSP trains and accredits agents in its existing retail network, those agents onboard new users at Level 1, and the digital wallet infrastructure captures transaction data that can eventually support credit assessment. This is a known model — versions of it have been deployed in Kenya (M-Pesa’s agent network), Ghana, and across West Africa. Algeria’s Instruction 06-2025 creates the legal conditions to replicate it domestically.

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Yassir’s Physical Expansion and the Cash-Digital Bridge

Yassir’s acquisition of the Uno hypermarket chain from Cevital — announced in March 2026 with plans to rebrand stores as “Yassir Market” — is not simply a retail play. It is an infrastructure play. The first flagship Yassir Market location is expected to open in Algiers in 2026, with features including click-and-collect grocery fulfillment, digital kiosks, and integrated Yassir Cash payments.

The strategic logic is the cash-digital bridge. Yassir has already established itself as a trusted super-app for Algerian users through ride-hailing, delivery, and related services. The Yassir Cash financial services layer extends that trust into payments. Physical Yassir Market locations — distributed across urban and peri-urban areas — create high-frequency touchpoints where Yassir Cash can become a habitual payment method for consumers who do not have bank accounts but do shop for groceries regularly.

This is a well-documented pathway to financial inclusion. Kenya’s M-Pesa reached scale not through banks but through airtime retailers and small shops where users could load cash and send it digitally. Yassir’s move is an Algerian variation: use hypermarket acquisition to plant physical nodes that convert cash transactions into digital Yassir Cash flows. The digital kiosks planned for Yassir Market locations are the agent interface — the point at which an unbanked shopper begins a relationship with a digital payment product.

Founded in 2017 by Noureddine Tayebi, Yassir has raised over $180 million in its history, including a $150 million round led by Bond. That capital base gives it the organizational depth to pursue both the retail expansion and the financial services infrastructure simultaneously — a combination that smaller fintech startups cannot replicate.

What Algerian Stakeholders Should Do About Agent Banking

Algeria’s agent banking model is emerging at the intersection of regulatory authorization, existing distribution networks, and consumer demand. For the different stakeholders involved — PSPs, retailers, and unbanked consumers — the practical readiness questions are distinct.

1. PSP Operators: Build the Agent Network Before Competitors Do

For fintech startups seeking a PSP license under Instruction 06-2025, the agent network provision is the most strategically significant element. The instruction authorizes agents through existing retail businesses, but it does not allocate exclusive territory or restrict agent partnerships. The PSP that moves fastest to sign retail agreements — with pharmacy chains, mobile phone retailers, or grocery networks — establishes the distribution advantage that is historically very difficult for later entrants to replicate in financial services. M-Pesa’s agent network dominance in Kenya is the canonical example: first-mover advantage in physical agent distribution became a near-insurmountable moat. Algerian PSPs should treat agent network development as a top-three priority from day one of licensing, not as a Phase 3 expansion.

2. Retail Businesses: Evaluate the Agent Role as a Revenue Stream

Existing retail businesses — especially those in wilayat outside the major urban centers, where banking infrastructure is thinnest — should understand that the PSP agent role is a potential revenue stream, not simply a community service. In functioning agent banking systems, agents earn transaction-based commissions for deposits, withdrawals, and account openings. The PSP bears the compliance burden; the retailer provides the physical presence and customer relationship. A pharmacy in Béjaïa or a mobile phone shop in Tizi Ouzou that processes 50 financial transactions per day at a 0.5% commission on a 5,000 DZD average transaction earns meaningful supplementary revenue. Retailers should actively assess their eligibility and interest in the agent role as PSPs begin licensing and agent recruitment.

3. Unbanked Consumers: Understand the Level 1 Wallet Is the Entry Point

For unbanked Algerian adults, the most important piece of information is the lowest: Level 1 digital wallet onboarding requires only basic digital identification and supports balances up to 100,000 DZD. This means the barrier to starting a formal financial services relationship is lower than it has ever been in Algeria. A consumer who has never interacted with a bank can open a Level 1 wallet through a licensed PSP agent — in a familiar retail environment, with assistance, without needing to navigate a bank branch. From that Level 1 entry point, the pathway to savings, transfer services, and eventually credit becomes accessible for the first time.

What Comes Next for Algeria’s Financial Inclusion Trajectory

The 57% unbanked figure is the starting point, not the permanent condition. EDAHABIA’s 14.3 million card holders demonstrate that distribution at scale is achievable through non-bank channels. Instruction 06-2025’s agent banking authorization demonstrates that the regulatory architecture for the next phase is in place. Yassir’s retail expansion demonstrates that private-sector capital is being deployed to build the physical infrastructure.

The missing element is coordination — ensuring that the PSP licensing pipeline, the agent network development, and the consumer awareness campaigns align in a timeframe that matches the opportunity. The Bank of Algeria’s 2026 regulatory sandbox will accelerate new entrants, but the sandbox accepts at minimum 20 innovators annually — a meaningful but finite pipeline. The AfricaNenda SIIPS 2024 report documented Algeria among the five countries studied for digital payment experience, noting that across the surveyed nations, less than half of users who experienced transaction problems managed to resolve them. Reliability infrastructure — not just access infrastructure — is part of what the agent banking model must eventually deliver.

The acceleration scenario for Algeria looks like this: three to five well-capitalized PSPs launch agent networks in 2026 and 2027, signing thousands of retail partners across all 58 wilayas. Level 1 wallet adoption moves from hundreds of thousands to millions of users within 24 months, mirroring EDAHABIA’s postal distribution trajectory but with a richer digital product. Transaction data from those wallets begins to support alternative credit scoring for users with no formal banking history. Algeria’s 57% unbanked figure begins to fall — not through branch building, but through the combination of regulatory authorization, private-sector distribution, and existing retail infrastructure that the agent banking model uniquely enables.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between the EDAHABIA card and a Bank of Algeria PSP digital wallet?

EDAHABIA is a prepaid card distributed through Algérie Poste’s 3,600+ post office network. It gives users a card for point-of-sale and ATM transactions but does not provide a full digital wallet, savings account, or transfer infrastructure. Bank of Algeria Instruction 06-2025 creates a framework for PSP-issued digital wallets with three tiers (up to 100,000 / 500,000 / 1,000,000 DZD), formal fund segregation, and authorization for agent networks. PSP wallets are designed for a broader range of digital financial services than a prepaid card, including peer-to-peer transfers, merchant payments, and future credit products.

How does Yassir Cash fit into Algeria’s financial inclusion strategy?

Yassir Cash is the financial services layer of Yassir’s super-app, built on the company’s existing trust relationship with Algerian users in ride-hailing and delivery. The Uno hypermarket acquisition — announced in March 2026 — creates physical Yassir Market locations that will serve as high-frequency touchpoints for Yassir Cash payments, effectively building a private agent network through owned retail locations. This is distinct from the licensed-agent model in Instruction 06-2025, which operates through third-party retailers, but both approaches pursue the same goal: converting cash-heavy Algerian consumers into digital payment users through physical distribution.

Which Algerian regions stand to benefit most from agent banking expansion?

Agent banking’s value is highest where bank branch density is lowest — typically rural and peri-urban areas across Algeria’s 58 wilayas outside Algiers, Oran, and Constantine. The three cities concentrate most of Algeria’s formal banking infrastructure. Wilayas in the south, the Hauts Plateaux, and Kabylie have significantly lower branch-to-population ratios. AfricaNenda’s 2024 digital payment survey included Algeria, noting that less than half of users who experienced payment problems managed to resolve them — a signal that both access and reliability remain uneven. Agent banking with strong PSP-backed support infrastructure can address both dimensions in underserved regions.

Sources & Further Reading