What MENA ecommerce needs in 2026
BNPL is no longer optional
Buy now, pay later penetration in MENA has grown faster than in any other region. Tabby and Tamara are now expected at checkout for any brand targeting UAE and Saudi consumers under 35. Not offering BNPL is leaving a measurable percentage of orders on the table.
Arabic-first content is a growth lever
Most MENA ecommerce brands still produce content in English and translate. The brands growing fastest are producing Arabic-first content — product descriptions, social posts, and customer service — and seeing higher conversion rates as a result.
Social commerce is maturing
Instagram and TikTok shopping in MENA are moving from experimental to primary acquisition channels. The brands winning here are investing in content infrastructure — not just boosted posts, but systematic content production at scale.
Logistics is a brand differentiator
In MENA, same-day and next-day delivery expectations are set by the region's biggest platforms. Smaller brands that can compete on fulfilment speed are seeing outsized loyalty returns.
The platform consolidation question
Many MENA brands are still on platforms they outgrew two years ago. 2026 is the year the migration conversation becomes unavoidable — the cost of staying is now higher than the cost of moving.
Conclusion
MENA ecommerce is entering a phase of structural maturity. The brands investing in the fundamentals — payments, content, logistics, platform — are building compounding advantages over those still patching legacy setups.
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Greatbase
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