In a region better known for authoritarian stability than financial innovation, Uzbekistan just made a quiet but seismic shift. On March 27, 2026, President Shavkat Mirziyoyev signed into law a comprehensive Islamic finance bill. When it takes effect on June 29, 2026, the legislation will fundamentally rewire how money moves in Central Asia’s most populous nation.
For the 36 million citizens of Uzbekistan—96% of whom are Muslim—this is not a niche religious accommodation. It is an economic liberation. And for Gulf Arab monarchies sitting on trillions in sovereign wealth, it is an invitation.
The Problem: Billions Dormant, Millions Excluded
For decades, this religious conviction meant that observant Muslims were forced to choose between their faith and access to mortgages, business loans, or even basic savings accounts.
The result? A massive parallel economy. Analysts estimate that billions of dollars’ worth of savings remain “under the mattress,” in gold jewelry, or in informal rotating savings clubs (known locally as hashar). This capital does not fuel economic growth. It does not back small business loans. It simply sits idle.
Islamic Finance Landscape in Central Asia (2026)
| Country | Islamic Banking Legal Framework | Operational Since | Number of Islamic Banks/Windows | Key Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uzbekistan | Dedicated law passed March 2026 (effective June 2026) | Not yet operational | 0 currently; 10 institutions preparing | Largest population, first-mover advantage in post-Soviet Gulf outreach |
| Kazakhstan | Yes (2009 law, amended several times) | 2009 | 1 full Islamic bank (Al Hilal), several windows | First-mover, established regulatory experience |
| Kyrgyzstan | Yes | 2012 | 2 full Islamic banks | Small but functional market |
| Russia | Pilot program (2023) | 2023 (pilot) | 2 pilot regions (Chechnya, Dagestan) | Political signal, but still experimental |
| Tajikistan | Limited | Limited | Minimal | Lags behind |
| Turkmenistan | None | N/A | None | Closed economy |
Source: SpecialEurasia analysis
The Solution: What the New Uzbek Law Actually Does
The legislation is not a vague declaration of intent. It is a technical, operational framework with three core components:
1. Legalizing Core Sharia-Compliant Instruments
The law explicitly permits three standard Islamic finance models:
- Murabaha (Cost-Plus Financing): The bank buys an asset (e.g., a house or equipment) and sells it to the customer at a marked-up price, payable in installments. The markup replaces interest.
- Musharaka (Joint Venture): The bank and customer partner in a business, sharing profits and losses according to pre-agreed ratios.
- Sukuk (Islamic Bonds): Asset-backed securities that generate returns for investors without paying “interest” as conventionally defined.
These instruments are not exotic. They are the backbone of a $2 trillion global Islamic finance industry. By codifying them, Uzbekistan’s Central Bank can now supervise, audit, and standardize them.
2. Creating a Council for Islamic Finance
Perhaps the most important institutional innovation is the creation of a five-member Council for Islamic Finance housed within the Central Bank. This council has three critical functions:
- Standard-setting: Defining what “Sharia-compliant” means in the Uzbek context.
- Compliance audits: Ensuring that licensed institutions actually follow the rules.
- Doctrinal oversight: Resolving religious disputes about new financial products.
This centralization is deliberate. In countries without such a council (e.g., early-stage Islamic finance in some Western nations), interpretive fragmentation leads to confusion, legal challenges, and investor distrust. Uzbekistan is copying the successful Malaysian and UAE model: one state-sanctioned authority, one set of rules.
3. Tax Code Modifications
Previous attempts at Islamic finance in post-Soviet states stumbled on double taxation. Here is why: In a conventional lease, the bank owns the asset and pays tax once. In an Islamic lease (Ijarah), ownership may transfer multiple times, triggering multiple tax events.
The new Uzbek law fixes this by:
- Exempting Sukuk and Islamic leasing from Value-Added Tax (VAT)
- Exempting income from Sharia-compliant investment deposits from personal income tax
These are not minor tweaks. They remove structural impediments that had previously discouraged Gulf investors.
The Prize: $1 Billion and Counting
What is the realistic upside? According to the analysis from SpecialEurasia, the law unlocks at least $1 billion in foreign capital—and likely much more.
Projected Impact of Islamic Finance Law on Uzbekistan’s Economy
| Metric | Pre-Law (2025) | Post-Law Projection (2030) | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Islamic banking assets | $0 | $2–3 billion | N/A |
| Fully independent Islamic banks | 0 | 2 | +2 |
| Financial institutions with Islamic windows | 0 | 10+ | +10 |
| SME financing from Islamic products | Negligible | $500+ million | Significant |
| Foreign direct investment from GCC | Baseline | +$1 billion (minimum) | +100%+ |
| Informal savings mobilized | $0 | Billions | N/A |
Sources: Government of Uzbekistan roadmap (2026–2030), SpecialEurasia estimates
Who will supply this capital? The usual suspects: sovereign wealth funds from Saudi Arabia (PIF), the UAE (ADIA, Mubadala), and Qatar (QIA). These funds are already investing in Central Asian energy, mining, and infrastructure. But they prefer jurisdictions with clear Islamic finance rules. Uzbekistan just checked that box.
The Regional Race: Tashkent vs. Almaty
Kazakhstan has long considered itself Central Asia’s financial hub. Almaty hosts the region’s most sophisticated capital markets. And Kazakhstan has had an Islamic banking law since 2009—but with limited uptake.
Why has Kazakhstan not taken off as an Islamic finance center? The answer is population and religiosity. Kazakhstan is only 70% Muslim, with a large secularized Russian-speaking minority. Its northern regions are barely observant. Uzbekistan, by contrast, is 96% Muslim, and its post-Soviet religious revival has been more pronounced.
Uzbekistan is also larger: 36 million people vs. Kazakhstan’s 19 million. That is nearly double the domestic market.
But Kazakhstan has one advantage: experience. Its Islamic Bank Al Hilal has been operating since 2010. Uzbek regulators will need to hire Sharia scholars, train auditors, and build a compliance culture from scratch. That takes time.
The verdict: Uzbekistan has the demographic tailwind. Kazakhstan has the head start. The next five years will determine which nation becomes Central Asia’s Dubai.
Strategic Risks: Four Reasons for Caution
No financial revolution is risk-free. The analysis identifies four structural challenges:
1. Foreign Influence Dynamics
Gulf capital rarely comes without conditions. Saudi and UAE financial institutions often align their strategies with state-linked geopolitical objectives. Uzbekistan will need to balance the need for investment with protections against external influence on its financial policies.
Example: If a Saudi bank provides critical infrastructure financing, might Riyadh expect favorable treatment on a future diplomatic issue? This is not hypothetical—it is standard practice in GCC foreign policy.
2. Regulatory Complexity
Running a dual banking system (conventional and Islamic side-by-side) is hard. It requires expertise in:
- Sharia auditing (different from conventional financial audit)
- Liquidity management for Islamic banks (they cannot use conventional interbank interest-based instruments)
- Product structuring (Murabaha, Musharaka, Sukuk, etc.)
Uzbekistan’s Central Bank will need to invest heavily in human capital. Hiring a few foreign consultants is not enough.
3. Market Disruption
Conventional Uzbek banks have operated for decades without Islamic competition. Now, they may lose their most observant customers. Some will adapt by opening Islamic windows. Others may fail.
This is not necessarily bad—competition improves efficiency—but it will create political friction. Expect lobbying from conventional bankers.
4. Reputational Risk
The worst-case scenario: a high-profile compliance failure. Imagine a bank claiming to be Sharia-compliant is found to have used interest-based contracts. The scandal would undermine trust across the entire sector. And because Islamic finance relies on religious legitimacy, a single bad actor can poison the well.
The Council for Islamic Finance exists precisely to prevent this. But councils are only as good as their enforcement capacity.
What Happens Next: The Roadmap
The government has published a clear, if ambitious, roadmap:
- By end-2026 (within six months): At least one Islamic window operational.
- By 2030: Two fully independent Islamic banks established.
Ten financial institutions have already signaled interest. These include state-owned giants and smaller private banks. Most will likely start with Islamic “windows” (a separate division within a conventional bank) before spinning off into full Islamic banks.
The first products will be simple: Murabaha for consumer durables (cars, appliances), and maybe small Sukuk issuances for infrastructure. More complex products (Musharaka for SME equity financing) will come later.
Why This Matters Beyond Uzbekistan
This law is not just about one country. It is a signal to the entire post-Soviet space. Russia launched pilot Islamic finance projects in Chechnya and Dagestan in 2023. But those were experiments, not structural reforms. Uzbekistan has now done what Russia has not: passed a comprehensive national law.
If Uzbekistan succeeds, expect copycat legislation in Tajikistan (96% Muslim), Turkmenistan (93%), and possibly even Tatarstan within Russia. The Central Asian Islamic finance market—currently fragmented and underdeveloped—could consolidate into a genuine alternative to Gulf-based centers.
Conclusion: A Quiet Revolution
On June 29, 2026, when this law takes effect, nothing dramatic will happen in Tashkent’s bank branches. There will be no parades. But over the following decade, the impact could be transformative.
Billions in dormant savings will enter the formal financial system. Gulf investors will find a new frontier for Sukuk issuances. And a generation of observant Muslims will finally access mortgages, business loans, and savings accounts without compromising their faith.
Uzbekistan is not trying to become the next Dubai overnight. But it is laying the foundation. And in finance, foundations matter more than facades.
Reference: here
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