Ripple is planting deeper roots in Bahrain through a new partnership with Bahrain FinTech Bay, the Kingdom’s main fintech incubator and ecosystem builder. The deal pairs Ripple’s decade-plus experience in digital assets with BFB’s local connections and know-how, and both sides say the goal is practical: test ideas, train people, and roll out real-world pilots.
Under the agreement, Ripple and BFB will work on proof-of-concept and pilot projects that match Bahrain’s fintech priorities, while also showcasing use cases across blockchain, cross-border payments, digital assets, stablecoins and tokenization. The partnership will include educational and accelerator programmes to build local talent and regular participation in local events to help forge industry collaborations.
“The Kingdom of Bahrain, has emerged as an early adopter of blockchain technology, and was one of the first jurisdictions globally to regulate cryptoassets,” said Reece Merrick, Managing Director, Middle East and Africa at Ripple. He added that Ripple is looking forward to helping lay foundations for a thriving local blockchain industry and eventually offering its custody solution and Ripple USD (RLUSD) stablecoin to Bahraini institutions.
Suzy Al Zeerah, Chief Operating Officer at Bahrain FinTech Bay, framed the tie-up as a continuation of Bahrain’s long-standing role as a financial hub. “This partnership with Ripple reflects Bahrain FinTech Bay’s commitment to bridging global innovators with the local ecosystem, creating opportunities for pilots, talent development, and cutting-edge solutions that will shape the future of finance,” she said.
Driving Blockchain Innovation
The announcement comes as Ripple is active in the region; the company attended Fintech Forward 2025, an Economist Impact event in Sakhir on October 8–9, which brought together fintechs, banks, regulators and policymakers to discuss the future of finance. Ripple is also leaning on a large regulatory footprint: the firm points to more than 60 licences and registrations worldwide and highlights a DFSA licence granted in March 2025, which made it the first blockchain-enabled payments provider licensed by the Dubai Financial Services Authority.
For Bahrain, the partnership is another step in its push to become a regional centre for digital finance. Bringing in a global player like Ripple gives local firms and regulators a chance to experiment with tokenization, stablecoins and other emerging tools under a supervised environment, and to see what can be scaled up for domestic and cross-border use.
Both Ripple and Bahrain FinTech Bay say they will start work on pilots and educational initiatives with the aim of turning talks into tangible services for banks, fintechs and corporates across the Gulf. If those pilots deliver, Bahrain could find itself hosting more live use cases that move beyond demos into everyday financial plumbing.