A Single QR Code That Works Across Every Bank
For years, mobile payment in Algeria meant a closed loop: a customer of one bank could pay a merchant only if that merchant banked with the same institution. DZ Mob Pay breaks that wall. Operated by SATIM, Algeria’s interbank electronic banking operator, the platform lets anyone scan a single QR code and pay any enrolled merchant, regardless of which bank either party uses. The funds land in the merchant’s account in under ten seconds.
That interoperability is the whole point. Before DZ Mob Pay, a café owner banking with BNA could not easily accept a QR payment from a CPA customer. Now the transaction settles across institutions on one shared rail, and neither side needs to think about who banks where. According to GIE Monétique’s 2025 report relayed by Algerie Invest, the launch of DZ Mob Pay was one of the standout developments of the year for Algeria’s financial-digital landscape.
The early traction is real. By the end of 2025, DZ Mob Pay counted roughly 95,000 personal accounts and more than 14,000 registered merchants — up sharply from about 79,000 users and 11,800 merchants recorded in early November 2025. The trajectory matters more than the absolute numbers: this is a platform compounding month over month, not a pilot stuck in a sandbox.
The Road From 7 Banks to 15
DZ Mob Pay went live across seven banks at the start of 2025: BNA, CPA, BDL, BEA, CNEP-Banque, Algeria Gulf Bank (AGB), and Al Salam Bank, alongside Algérie Poste through its Baridi Mob application. Two more institutions — BADR and Fransabank Algérie — are slated to join before year-end, lifting the count to nine.
The headline target, confirmed by Algerie Eco, is 15 banks interconnected by 2026. SATIM’s role is to keep that expansion running on a unified infrastructure built for secure, continuous processing of every interbank transaction — so that adding a new bank does not mean rebuilding the rail. The objective is generalization: mobile payment usable at essentially any Algerian financial institution, not just the early adopters.
This expansion lands on top of an already-surging market. The total value of electronic payments in Algeria — POS terminals, online checkout, and mobile combined — reached 939 billion dinars in 2025, against 643.8 billion in 2024, a 46% jump. Each channel grew on its own terms:
- Online payments surged 179% to 145 billion dinars across more than 27 million transactions, driven heavily by the AADL 3 housing program’s exclusively-online first installment.
- POS terminal value doubled to 89.5 billion dinars, with the device fleet climbing from 68,140 to 78,774 terminals.
- Intra-bank QR transactions rose 19% to 69.3 million operations worth 57.3 billion dinars — the base layer that DZ Mob Pay now makes interbank.
DZ Mob Pay’s interbank layer is still young inside those totals, but it sits exactly where the growth is concentrated: QR at the point of sale.
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Where DZ Mob Pay Fits in the Wider Ecosystem
DZ Mob Pay does not replace Algeria’s existing payment fabric — it knits it together. The CIB and EDAHABIA card schemes, both anchored on SATIM, remain the backbone of card acceptance, and gateways like Chargily Pay integrate CIB-SATIM and EDAHABIA for online merchants. Bank-specific wallets such as Baridi Pay (Algérie Poste) and Wimpay (BNA) gave consumers their first taste of mobile QR. What was missing was the connective tissue: a way to make those closed wallets talk to each other.
That is the gap DZ Mob Pay fills. For a merchant, it collapses a fragmented landscape into one acceptance point. For the broader cashless push, it removes the single biggest friction point — the question “but do they use my bank?” — that kept QR adoption uneven across Algeria.
What Algerian Merchants and Developers Should Do Now
The window to position around DZ Mob Pay is open while the network is still scaling toward 15 banks. Three moves stand out.
1. Integrate DZ Mob Pay into your payment stack now
If you run a shop, restaurant, or service business, enroll while merchant onboarding is a competitive advantage rather than table stakes. With roughly 95,000 active accounts and growing, the customer base is large enough to matter and small enough that early acceptance signals modernity. Treat DZ Mob Pay as a complement to your CIB/EDAHABIA card terminal, not a replacement — the goal is to never turn away a customer because of which bank they use.
2. Optimize the merchant QR onboarding experience
For developers and PSPs building checkout flows, the value is in the experience layer SATIM does not own. Pre-fill amounts into dynamic QR codes, surface the sub-ten-second confirmation clearly to the cashier, and reconcile DZ Mob Pay receipts into the same dashboard as card and online sales. Merchants will choose the integrator that makes a cross-bank QR payment feel as simple as cash, not the one that exposes the plumbing underneath.
3. Plan for the 15-bank expansion before year-end
Build your roadmap around the confirmed timeline: nine banks within months, 15 in 2026. That means designing onboarding, support scripts, and marketing for a near-universal-bank world rather than today’s seven-bank reality. Lock in merchant relationships now so that when the remaining banks light up, your acceptance footprint expands automatically instead of requiring a fresh sales cycle for each new bank’s customers.
The Road to a Cashless Algeria
DZ Mob Pay is less a product launch than a structural shift in how value moves between Algerians. By making the bank invisible to the transaction, SATIM is doing for QR payments what the interbank card switch once did for ATMs — turning a set of isolated services into a single national utility. The 939-billion-dinar market and its 46% growth show the demand is already there; what DZ Mob Pay adds is the interoperability that lets that demand flow without friction.
The next step is breadth. Reaching 15 banks in 2026 would put interbank QR acceptance within reach of the vast majority of Algerian account holders, and that scale is what turns an early-adopter behavior into a default one. For merchants, developers, and banks, the strategic question is no longer whether interbank mobile payment will become standard in Algeria — it is who will be ready when it does.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is DZ Mob Pay and who operates it?
DZ Mob Pay is Algeria’s interbank mobile payment platform that lets users send money and pay merchants by scanning a QR code, regardless of which bank either party uses. It is operated by SATIM, Algeria’s interbank electronic banking operator, on a unified infrastructure that settles cross-bank transactions in under ten seconds.
How many banks support DZ Mob Pay and when will it reach 15?
As of late 2025, seven banks (BNA, CPA, BDL, BEA, CNEP-Banque, AGB, Al Salam Bank) plus Algérie Poste via Baridi Mob were connected. BADR and Fransabank Algérie are joining to bring the total to nine, and the confirmed target is 15 interconnected banks during 2026.
How big is Algeria’s electronic payment market right now?
Algeria’s total electronic payments — POS, online, and mobile combined — reached 939 billion dinars in 2025, up 46% from 643.8 billion in 2024. Online payments alone grew 179% to 145 billion dinars, and intra-bank QR transactions rose 19% to 69.3 million operations, the channel DZ Mob Pay now makes interbank.
Sources & Further Reading
- Further Reading
- E-payments: 939 billion dinars in 2025, up 46% — Algeria Invest
- Electronic Payments in Algeria Surge by 46% in 2025 — DzairTube
- Mobile payment interoperability extended to 15 banks in 2026 — Algerie Eco
- Exploring Local Payment Methods and Digital Finance in Algeria — Transfi
- Chargily Pay Shopify plugin (CIB-SATIM + EDAHABIA) — GitHub














