Explainer | Read time: 5 minutes
UAE fintech CEPAs give business leaders a real hedge against currency volatility, high remittance costs, and unpredictable market access, and the 2025 numbers back that up.
Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements have pushed the UAE’s non-oil trade past $1 trillion, a 27 percent jump from the year before[6]. The digital trade chapters inside these deals build unified digital identities, cross-border e-invoicing, and paperless customs procedures, and these tools already move billions of dollars a day between the UAE and India alone[14].
This article breaks down how the mechanics work, what they have delivered so far, and where the security gaps still sit.
CEPAs Turn Trade Into a Hedge
The UAE has signed CEPAs with 36 countries, covering roughly 3 billion people[5]. These agreements protect the UAE’s non-oil economy against the kind of volatility that hit oil-dependent budgets across the region in 2025. The UAE’s real non-oil GDP grew 6.8 percent that year, reaching AED 1.5 trillion, the fastest growth rate since 2022[4]. Trade drove 16.9 percent of that non-oil GDP, more than any other sector[4].
Free zones show the same pattern at a local level. Abu Dhabi’s non-oil foreign trade grew 36 percent in 2025 to AED 415.4 billion[20]. The Dubai Integrated Economic Zones Authority posted its own record year, with non-oil trade up 46 percent to AED 491 billion[22]. Machinery, electronics, and electrical equipment made up over 70 percent of that trade, growing 42 percent year on year[22].
None of that growth happens without the legal and technical scaffolding the CEPAs put in place.
Digital Trade Rules Cut Real Friction
The UAE-India CEPA’s digital trade chapter, in force since May 2022, set the template other agreements now follow[14]. It bans customs duties on electronic transmissions, protects consumers in digital marketplaces, and guarantees the free movement of electronic information[14]. Article 9.5 requires each country to align its domestic electronic transactions framework with the UNCITRAL Model Law on Electronic Commerce, and Article 9.6 bars either government from rejecting a signature’s legal validity just because it’s digital[17].
This chapter routes disputes through regulatory dialogue rather than formal arbitration, which keeps disagreements from stalling trade flows while both sides work them out[16].
The commercial results confirm the model works. Non-oil trade between the UAE and India hit $28.2 billion in the first half of 2024 alone, a 9.8 percent increase over the year before[15]. The UAE also became India’s fourth-largest foreign investor in 2023, committing $3.35 billion, three times what it committed in 2022[15].
South Korea, Vietnam, and Chile now carry similar digital trade provisions, giving UAE exporters predictable rules in each new market[6].
Aani-UPI Link Lowers Remittance Costs
CEPAs don’t stop at trade text. They extend into the payment infrastructure that moves money between countries, and the clearest example sits between the UAE and India.
In February 2024, the Central Bank of the UAE linked India’s Unified Payments Interface with Aani, the UAE’s domestic instant payment platform[24]. The link lets users in both countries send peer-to-peer payments through mobile apps instead of routing them through international wire transfers[24].
That change matters directly to the 3.5 million Indian nationals living in the UAE, who send billions of dollars home each year and now do it instantly at a lower cost[25]. Tourists benefit too: they can pay merchants directly by QR code in local currency and skip foreign exchange card fees[24]. The UAE paired this with Jaywan, its own card scheme built on the shared RuPay stack, making the UAE the first GCC country to clear domestic transactions independently of international card networks[25].
For a CFO weighing cross-border payment costs, this infrastructure is the tangible payoff of the CEPA relationship, not just a policy footnote.
Automation Opens a New Security Gap
The same digital infrastructure that makes CEPA trade fast also creates a new cost. GCC corporate boards are deploying generative AI and automated workflows to cut staff numbers and control costs, and these systems now handle invoices, vendor coordination, and customer service[12].
Developers often connect these systems straight to core databases through APIs without enforcing data tokenisation, the process of swapping sensitive data for non-sensitive identifiers[12]. Without that step, attackers can exploit the connection to bypass firewalls and reach financial or customer records[12].
The threat has moved fast. In early 2026, CloudSEK identified a wave of AI-assisted attacks targeting government databases and financial firms across the Gulf[12].
Palo Alto Networks Unit 42 separately tracked credential phishing campaigns in the UAE that mimic corporate ERP systems[12].
The GCC fintech market’s projected growth to $26.8 billion by 2034 raises the stakes further, since fintech startups often prioritize fast launches over security audits when they connect to legacy banking systems[12]. This is the cost side of the hedge: the same connectivity that unlocks CEPA trade gains widens the attack surface if firms skip the security work.
The Compliance Investment Closes the Loop
RegTech spending and AI governance frameworks are becoming the entry price for firms that want the trade gains without the security exposure.
SAMA’s mandatory Cyber Security Framework pushed 94 percent of Saudi financial institutions to compliance by the fourth quarter of 2025[17].
Financial institutions using RegTech platforms cut compliance costs by 30 to 50 percent, and the GCC region is projected to spend $1.8 billion on compliance technology[17]. The UAE’s 2024 AI Charter adds a second layer, setting national rules for accountability and data protection that let firms scale AI systems without regulatory surprises[31].
Business leaders evaluating CEPA-driven growth need to budget for both sides of this equation. The trade gains are real and documented. So is the security bill that comes with the infrastructure that produces them.
