Introduction

About the Yearbook

This edition of the Eurasian Payment Cards Yearbook 2024-25 is the sixteenth in this series since the publishers decided to split Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) away from the European Payment Cards Yearbook, which formerly included Russia and Ukraine.

The 10 Eurasian countries reviewed in this Yearbook are as follows:

EA10: Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz Republic, and Uzbekistan.

Those countries which form part of the Eurasian region, but are not profiled due to lack of data, are Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.

The ‘Eurasian Payment Cards Yearbook’ was published for the first time in September 2009, under the name of ‘Russia, Georgia and CIS Payments Cards Yearbook’. Georgia withdrew from the CIS in August 2009; thus the ‘Russia, CIS’ Yearbook’s title was amended to ‘Russia, Georgia and CIS’ Yearbook. It is now entitled the ‘Eurasian Payments Cards Yearbook.’

In many Eurasian countries, the central bank, or domestic payments organisation compiles payment cards data of good quality. Official 2023 payment cards data is available in full or in part from all 10 of the country profiles in the 2024-25 edition of the Eurasian Payment Cards Yearbook.

There are 33 countries in the European Payment Cards Yearbook. These are the 31 countries forming the European Economic Area (EEA) – the EU27 with Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and the UK – plus Serbia and Turkey.

The decision to split coverage of the Eurasian yearbook from the European yearbook was based on current and future potential differences between the regions, on the increasing number of statistical anomalies thrown up, and on the opportunity created to focus more closely on the hitherto-uncovered countries of central Asia.

The countries of Europe are generally mature payments markets, with cards issued and acceptance networks at or near saturation point in many cases. While this is less true of more recent EU-accession countries such as Bulgaria and Romania, investment by Western banking groups and ongoing economic integration at EU level make it likely that the maturity of their payments will converge over time towards those of the more developed markets.

Note on the Eurasian Countries

The countries within Eurasia, on the other hand, can be characterised as having significant potential for market growth, as the per capita figures show. In the field of cards issued, Eurasia is making good progress. In 2023, cards per capita in Eurasia averaged 2.42 cards per capita equivalent to cards per capita for the EU Member States, while the EU27 reported 1.68 cards per capita.

1 - Trends in Cards per Capita
20192020202120222023GR 22/23CAGR 5Y
Cards issued - Eurasia (m)417.49459.48509.63585.49681.0416.3%12.0%
Annual growth rate/year - Eurasia8.2%10.1%10.9%14.9%16.3%--
Cards per capita - Eurasia1.501.651.832.092.4215.6%11.6%
Cards issued - EU28, 2020+: EU27 (m)863.00739.24768.73829.00815.51-1.6%-0.3%
Annual growth rate/year - EU284.0%-14.3%4.0%7.8%-1.6%--
Cards per capita - EU271.571.651.721.851.81-2.1%3.9%
Note: Eurasian figures for the EA10 countries exclude Tajikistan and Turkmenistan.
Note: EU figures are for EU28 apart from 2020 which is for EU27 (without UK).
Source: Yearbooks research.

Acceptance networks in Eurasia have shown much lower levels of development, no longer including Russia, but in 2023, ATMs per million inhabitants were 706.3 in Eurasia compared with 628.4 for the EU Member States. There is an interesting infrastructure convergence, in that ATMs per capita are increasing in Eurasia, even as they decrease in Europe owing to the trend towards digital payment. In 2022, Eurasia had 679.4 ATMs per million inhabitants while the EU27+UK reported 641.3 ATMs per million inhabitants.

In the case of POS terminals per million inhabitants, the Eurasian figure was 23,259.9 compared with 47,601.1 in the EU Member States. In 2022, Eurasia had 21,172.0 POS terminals per million inhabitants while the EU27+UK reported 42,741.7 POS terminals per million inhabitants).

Appendices

The Eurasian Payment Cards Yearbook is now in its sixteenth edition. Over the past decade, a substantial amount of information has become historical in nature, though it remains useful in understanding the evolution of a specific market. To preserve this information and improve the narrative of the main profile, background information has been moved where appropriate to the back of the profile, under the heading ‘Appendix.’

In some countries, selected important information has not been updated because of lack of recent data. The respective tables have also been retained in this edition of the Yearbook to show historic trends, and in the hope that coverage can be resumed in future editions.

Country Profiles – Structure 

The core of the Eurasian Payment Cards Yearbook is the series of profiles of the card markets of Eurasia country by country. These include key statistical information and data on the following subjects, though not all profiles contain all of them:

Market Overview

Introduction

Banking Sector

Payment Services

Market Infrastructure

Central Bank Digital Currencies (CDBC) – The Digital Cash Challenge 

Unregulated Cryptocurrency Products – Background

Market size and dynamics

Appendix

In order to address new technologies and the payment industry market trends year-on-year, the Eurasian Payment Card Yearbook 2024-2025 was updated and enhanced by adding information and data on:

Card Business Update

New Payment Business Trends

Eurasian Overview Section 

In addition to the country profiles, the Eurasian Payment Cards Yearbook includes a regional overview with key statistics. Contents of the regional section can be summarised as follows:

Glossary of Geopolitical Terms 

CEE, SEE and CIS: The common factor between the countries of central and eastern Europe (CEE), those of the CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) and those of SEE (south-eastern Europe) is that all formed part of the old USSR or of Comecon, the bloc of European countries which fell under Soviet domination after World War II. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1989, much has changed.

The term CEE now covers the countries which joined the EU in 2004 plus Bulgaria and Romania, while SEE refers to the former Yugoslavia, excluding Slovenia and Croatia, which both have joined the EU, but comprising Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, and Serbia.

EA10: Georgia and nine CIS countries are covered in the Eurasian Payment Cards Yearbook: Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova and Uzbekistan.

Also forming part of the CIS, but not profiled due to lack of data, are Tajikistan and Turkmenistan. Georgia withdrew from the CIS in August 2009.

The other countries of Europe are sub-divided as follows:

Euro zone: The euro area came into being when responsibility for monetary policy was transferred from the national central banks of 11 EU member states to the ECB in January 1999. Greece joined the euro area in 2001, Slovenia in 2007, Cyprus and Malta in 2008, Slovakia in 2009, Estonia in 2011, Latvia in 2014, Lithuania in 2015, and Croatia in 2023 so that when this Yearbook went to press in December 2024, there were 20 members, plus the Vatican City, San Merino, Andorra and Monaco as minor independent entities. Croatia adopted the euro as its currency on 1 January 2023, becoming the 20th member state of the euro zone.

EU15: The 15 members of the EU before its enlargement in 2004 – the euro zone 12 plus Denmark, Sweden, and the UK.

EU25: The EU15 plus the ten countries which acceded to the EU in May 2004 – Czech Republic, Cyprus, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia; also known as ‘A10’ (short for Accession 10).

EU27: In January 2007, Bulgaria and Romania became EU Member States.

EU27: As of 2021, with the UK’s exit from the EU completed, the Yearbooks use the EU27 abbreviation to note the remaining EU members.

EU27 + UK: In 2020, the UK left the EU. During the transition process in 2020, the Yearbooks used the abbreviation EU27 + UK instead of EU28 in the comparable tables of the Eurasian Yearbook. The reason was to keep important key payments industry indicators of 2019 comparable to previous years.

EU28: In July 2013, Croatia became the 28th EU Member State.

EEA: European Economic Area – the EU28 countries plus Iceland, Norway, Lichtenstein and Switzerland. All the 32 countries comply with the EC directives, EC regulations and EU initiatives, including SEPA.

E33: The 33 countries covered in the European Payment Cards Yearbook are composed of the EU28 countries plus Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, Serbia and Turkey.

Individual Eurasian Country Profiles

1 – Armenia   6 – Kyrgyz Republic

2 – Azerbaijan   7 – Moldova

3 – Belarus   8 – Russia

4 – Georgia   9 – Ukraine

5 – Kazakhstan 10 – Uzbekistan

Acknowledgments

The report draws on statistics and information from the national central banks (NCBs), the Bank of International Settlement (BIS), domestic payment organisations and commercial banks.

The Yearbook editors thank all those individuals and organisations who have kindly supplied information and statistics.

Conventions

, (comma) thousands (e.g. 1,000)
. (dot) decimal point (e.g. 100.5)
Ø abbreviation symbol for “on average”, e.g. Ø TX per card
ATM Withdrawals Cash withdrawals in the country made with domestic cards and with foreign cards – acquirer view
Billion, bn 1,000 million, abbreviated as bn (e.g. €bn)
Card Payments Payments made with domestic cards in the country and with domestic cards abroad – issuer view
Delayed debit Also called deferred debit or charge card; i.e. a card linked to account where bill is paid monthly, but the card has no credit function activated
estimated estimated figures in tables and in the text are marked in italic format
Million, m Million, abbreviated as m (e.g. 3m cards)
na, nav, n/a Not Available; no available values
POS Payments Payments made in the country with domestic cards and with foreign cards– acquirer view
POS Terminals POS terminals in terms of EFTPOS terminals. Cash registers are named as ECR devices in the Yearbook.
Transactions Invariably the term used to cover payments and ATM withdrawals combined, also abbreviated as TX or TXs
Trillion 1,000 billion
Value versus
Volume
Early editions of the Yearbook followed the VISA/Mastercard convention of describing monetary values as “volume,” in the sense of turnover or revenue. As little data now comes from the international schemes, the term “value” is used in the more recent editions, in line with the ECB data and other sources.

Abbreviations

The Yearbook comprises a set of abbreviations used in the country profiles and in the European section where appropriate. Common in the payment industries, this list of abbreviations is provided as a kind of Yearbook glossary:

ACH Automated Clearing House, no longer used;
replaced by: Clearing & Settlement Mechanism (CSM)
ACQ Acquirer, Acquiring
AISP Account Information Service Provider
AML Anti-Money Laundering
API, Open API Application Programming Interface (API) – a programming language and message format used by software applications to communicate with each other; also: Open API, Public API, Partner API, Private API
ASPSP Account Servicing Payment Service Provider
ATM Automatic Teller Machine, e.g. for cash withdrawals
ATV Average Transaction Value
BIC Business Identifier Code (8 to 11 digits)
BLE Bluetooth Low Energy (Bluetooth Smart)
BNPL Buy Now Pay Later: a flexible instalment service for digital payments
CEE Central East Europe
CMP Contactless Mobile Payments
CNP Card Not Present, on the Internet
COD Cash-/Card-on-Delivery Payments
COF Card on File
CPS Card Payment Schemes
CSC Card Security Code, e.g. CVC2, CVV2, CID, CID2
CSM Clearing Settlement Mechanism
CTP Click-To-Pay: digital wallet standard of Mastercard, VISA, American Express, Discover, JCB and China Union Pay
DCC Dynamic Currency Conversion
DMIF Domestic Interchange Fee
ECR Electronic Cash Register; i.e. cash handling device
EEA European Economic Area (28 EU + 4 EWR countries)
EMV Global standard for inter-operation of chip cards with chip card capable ATM terminals and POS terminals
EOD End-of-Day; e.g. EOD data collection
GDP Gross Domestic Product
GNP Gross National Domestic Product
HCE, HCE NFC Host Card Emulation; technology to store card credentials in the cloud instead of storing them on the mobile phone
HSM High Security Module; used for encryption
IBAN International Bank Account Number
IFSF International Forecourt Standards Forum
IPG Internet Payment Gateway
ISS Issuer, Issuing
KYC Know Your Customer is the process of a business identifying and verifying the identity of its clients.
LVP Low Value Payment, acronym for payments of low purchase value (e.g. <25 EUR)
MasterPass Digital Wallet of the card scheme Mastercard, replaced by Click-To-Pay
MCC Merchant Category Code
MCSC Mastercard SecureCode, replaced by 3D-Secure Code
MFI Monetary Financial Institution
MIT Merchant Initiated Transaction
MMS Multimedia Messaging Service, i.e. offered by mobile operators on mobile phones
MMT Mobile Money Transfer
MNO Mobile Network Operator
MOTO Mail-Order/Telephone-Order
MPI Merchant Plug-In; connecting online shops with an Internet Payment Gateway
MPOS MPOS Terminal, mini-POS terminal for mobile merchants
MSC Merchant Service Charge
MVNO Mobile Virtual Network Operator
NCB National Central Bank of a country
NFC Near Field Communication; i.e. contactless technology
NSP ATM/POS Network Service Processor
OBP Open Banking Payments, e.g. OBP processor
OTA Over-The-Air; i.e. using the mobile network channel
OTI Over-The-Internet; i.e. using the internet channel
PCI Payment Card Industry; standards: e.g. PCI PTS, PCI DSS
PIN Personal Identification Number
PISP Payment Information Service Provider
PLC Private Label Card, card issued by a retailer
POI Point of Interaction, acronym for multi-channel POS types
POS Point of Sale
PSD, PSD2 Payment Services Directive of the European Union
PSP Payment Service Processor (i.e. specialised internet payment processor) also Payment Service Provider
RBA Risk-based Authentication
RTS Regulatory Technical Standards
SCA Strong Customer Authentication
SE Secure Element, i.e. secure storage of card credentials
SEPA Single Euro Payments Area; i.e. 19 countries (2019)
SIM SE NFC NFC ecosystem with the card credentials stored in a secure element of the SIM card of a NFC capable mobile phone
SME Small & Medium Enterprises
SMS Short Messaging Service, i.e. text messaging service offered by mobile operators on mobile phones
SRC Secure Remote Commerce Standard of EMVCo
STP Straight Through Processing, i.e. automatic transaction
TAN Transaction Authentication Number, used to secure online banking transactions, also iTAN, mTAN
TPP Trusted Payment Provider
TMS Terminal Management System
TSM Trusted Service Manager
TX, TXs abbreviation for transaction or transactions
VAT Value Added Tax
VbV Verified-by-VISA, replaced by 3D-Secure Code
VPSP Virtual Payment Service Provider
VRP Variable Recurring Payments
VISA Checkout Digital Wallet of card scheme VISA, replaced by Click-To-Pay
XS2A Access to Account for authorised TPPs with explicit customer consent

Notable Organisations active in Eurasia 

The Yearbook notes a list of selected payment industry associations which are active in Europe and, thus, are seen as notable from a European market point of view:

AmEx American Express, www.americanexpress.com
BIS Bank for International Settlement, www.bis.org
CIS Commonwealth of Independent States, www.cisstat.com
CISPI Commonwealth of Independent States Payments and Securities Settlement Initiative,
Diners Diners Club International, www.dinersclub.com
Discover Discover, www.discover.com
EBF European Banking Federation, www.efb-fbe.eu
EBRD European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, www.ebrd.com
EAEU, EEU Eurasian Economic Union,
EMVCo The EMVCo association manages the EMV specifications, www.emvco.com
IMF International Monetary Fund, www.imf.org
JCB JCB International (Europe) Ltd., www.jcbcorporate.com
Mastercard Card scheme Mastercard, www.mastercard.com
UnionPay Chinese card scheme, also: China Union Pay (CUP), www.unionpay.com
VISA Card scheme VISA, www.visa.com

Charts, Diagrams and Tables 

1. Regional Overview
1.1 Table Biggest non-Russian Banks in Eurasia
1.2 Map Largest Banks by Country
1.3 Table Eurasian Growth Forecasts
1.4 Table Eurasian Inflation Forecasts
1.5 Table Remittance Inflows in Eurasia
1.6 Table National Interbank Card Schemes in Eurasia
2. Cards Overview
2.1 Table Cards by Region and Per Capita
2.2 Table Cards and Payments
2.3 Table BIS Summary of Russian Card Payments
2.4 Table Cards Issued
2.5 Table Card Payments
2.6 Table ATM Withdrawals
2.7 Table Total Card Transactions
2.8 Table Value of Card Expenditure
2.9 Table Value of ATM Withdrawals
2.10 Table Card Payments per Capita
2.11 Table ATM Withdrawals per Capita
2.12 Table Average Card Payment in $
2.13 Table Average ATM Withdrawals in $
2.14 Table ATM Transactions as a Percentage of Total Transactions
3: Acceptance Networks
3.1 Table POS Terminals by Country
3.2 Table POS Terminals per Capita
3.3 Table ATMs by Country
3.4 Table ATMs per Capita
Digital & Card Payment Yearbooks