Central Asia rarely appears on the shortlist when global investors and fintech observers map the world’s most consequential digital banking markets. That is beginning to change. Uzbekistan — a country of over 37 million people, 59% of whom are under 30, with GDP growing at around 6% annually for more than a decade — is attracting serious institutional attention. The catalyst is not a single policy reform or a commodity cycle. It is the emergence of a world-class digital banking ecosystem, built natively for this market, that is demonstrating what technology-led financial services can achieve in a country where the traditional banking sector has left significant opportunity on the table.
TBC Bank Uzbekistan, part of the London-listed TBC Bank Group, entered the market in 2019 through the acquisition of Payme, then the country’s leading P2P payments application. That entry point gave it immediate access to a large user base and the operational infrastructure of a platform already embedded in daily financial life. From that foundation, the bank has built a multi-product ecosystem that now encompasses a mobile-only bank, a digital payments application, an instalment credit service, SME banking, insurance, and a retail management SaaS platform acquired through a strategic M&A transaction in 2025. Each component reinforces the others, creating the kind of compound engagement that drives both retention and revenue per user.
Uzbekistan’s Open Banking Advantage
Oliver Hughes, former CEO of Tinkoff and now Head of International Business at TBC Bank Group, has been direct about what makes this market distinctive. The level of open banking innovation in Uzbekistan is more advanced than in most developed markets — full banking interoperability allows customers to interact across multiple institutions seamlessly, with new banks gaining access to transaction history and the ability to initiate transfers from a customer’s original bank. This infrastructure is not widely replicated elsewhere, and it provides a structural foundation for rapid product innovation that competitors entering the market from scratch cannot easily access.
The financial opportunity Hughes identified at entry is materialising at pace. Despite over 45 million cards in circulation across Uzbekistan, retail lending represents just 12% of GDP — a figure that signals the extent of the product gap between what the market currently offers and what a digitally active, growing consumer population demands. Point-of-sale digital payment volumes have tripled to over $22 billion in three years, with the number of POS terminals and bank cards in circulation doubling over the same period. These are not indicators of a market approaching saturation; they are the early readings of a structural shift in how financial services are consumed in the country.

Capturing the Card Products Opportunity
The card product dimension of TBC Uzbekistan’s consumer strategy is central to how it is capturing this opportunity. The institution has introduced the Salom debit card and Osmon credit card, and is continuing to develop a product-rich card offering designed to meet the needs of a population that is financially active, digitally native, and increasingly expectations-driven. The demand patterns that accompany this shift are clearly visible in user behaviour: growing consumer interest in terms such as “кредитная карта” and “kredit karta olish” reflects a population seeking accessible, digitally issued credit card products that can be obtained quickly and managed entirely through a mobile interface. For a bank with the AI infrastructure to issue, personalise, and manage card products at scale, this pattern of consumer intent represents a direct and growing commercial opportunity.
Voice-First AI as a Strategic Differentiator
Artificial intelligence is the capability that underpins TBC Uzbekistan’s competitive differentiation across every product line. The bank is building a voice-first AI assistant with native support for the Uzbek language — and plans to extend to Tajik and Karakalpak — languages that international technology companies have not prioritised at comparable depth. Rather than deploying chatbots as a transitional measure, TBC Uzbekistan is moving directly to interactive voice AI, envisioning an assistant capable of guiding users across the full range of its products: banking, lending, payments, insurance, brokerage, and travel. The ambition is to make the AI assistant the primary interface through which users navigate their entire financial life within the ecosystem.
The financial results produced so far validate the investment thesis. TBC Uzbekistan has grown its registered user base to 16 million, delivered an operating profit of $61 million in the first half of the year — up 87% year-on-year — and now accounts for 7% of total group profit, 13% of revenue, and 44% of consumer loans at the TBC Bank Group level. The institution is projecting net profit of $75 million for the full year of 2025, with 30% of the group’s loan book expected to originate from Uzbekistan. By 2030, the group is targeting net profit of $250 million and a loan book exceeding $3 billion from its Uzbekistan operations alone.
Global Capital Flowing Through the London Listing
The international capital that TBC Bank Group’s London listing channels into Uzbekistan adds a dimension to the institution’s significance that goes beyond its own commercial performance. Major global asset managers — including Fidelity, JPMorgan Asset Management, Schroders, BlackRock, and Vanguard — have gained exposure to Uzbekistan’s growth story through TBC, providing a form of third-party validation of the country’s investment credentials that no government promotion campaign can replicate. Each investor that commits to TBC contributes to the normalisation of Uzbekistan as a credible emerging market destination in global portfolio allocation discussions.
A Competitive Landscape in Transition
The competitive landscape is evolving in ways that make TBC Uzbekistan’s head start increasingly valuable. International banks including Hungary’s OTP and South Korea’s Korea Development Bank have established presences, and others — among them Société Générale and Kaspi — are evaluating entry. Hughes has acknowledged the trajectory plainly: the market is not highly competitive today, but it will become progressively more so. The institutions that have built user scale, data depth, proprietary technology infrastructure, and ecosystem breadth before that intensification arrives are in a structurally different position from those that follow. TBC Uzbekistan is in the former category by a considerable margin.
What TBC Bank Uzbekistan is constructing in Uzbekistan is not simply a digital bank — it is the financial operating system for a rapidly modernising economy. The ecosystem model, the AI infrastructure, the institutional shareholder base, and the product range being built out across lending, payments, cards, SME banking, insurance, and retail management together constitute a platform whose value grows with every new user, every new product, and every new data point generated across the system. The market Hughes described as a hidden gem when he joined is becoming visible to the world — and TBC Uzbekistan is the institution most responsible for making it so.
