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Digital wallets poised to overtake credit cards in Hong Kong by 2030: report

A survey found that 42 per cent of Hongkongers use Alipay and 22 per cent use Apple Pay, but credit cards are likely to remain relevant

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Passengers pay for the Star Ferry from Tsim Sha Tsui to Central next to an advertisement for Alipay on December 19, 2024. Photo: Jelly Tse

Digital wallets are on track to become the dominant payment method in Hong Kong by 2030, accounting for nearly half of all online and in-store transactions, marking a significant shift away from traditional credit card payments, according to a new report.

Digital wallets – typically smartphone-enabled payment systems run by technology companies such as Google and Apple – are projected to account for 45 per cent of the city’s online transaction value and 48 per cent of point-of-sale (POS) transactions at bricks-and-mortar shops within the next five years, according to the 2025 Global Payments Report published by Worldpay.

The direct use of credit cards, both online and in-person, is expected to decline to 32 per cent, down from 39 per cent of online spending and 45 per cent of POS transaction value in 2024, the London-based payment processing company said. A decade ago, those figures were 62 per cent and 56 per cent, respectively.

The surge in digital wallet adoption is largely attributed to rising smartphone usage among consumers, according to Daniel So, head of business development for Hong Kong at Worldpay.

“This trend underscores the inevitability of payment technologies becoming increasingly integrated into our daily lives,” So said. “We see downtrends in credit card usage compared to the growing adoption of digital wallets.”

The most widely used mobile wallet in Hong Kong was AlipayHK, with 42 per cent of respondents to the Worldpay survey citing the Ant Group-owned app as their preferred option. Ant is the fintech affiliate of Alibaba Group Holding, owner of the South China Morning Post.
Octopus has moved from physical cards to providing its own mobile wallet for smartphones in recent years. Photo: Edmond So
Octopus has moved from physical cards to providing its own mobile wallet for smartphones in recent years. Photo: Edmond So
Danielle joined the SCMP as a graduate trainee in 2024. She holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in journalism from the University of Toronto, where she also worked with some prominent Toronto media entities as well as community papers. She qualified for the Emerging Journalists Bursary from the Canadian Journalism Foundation.
Aileen has reported in Taiwan, Hong Kong and the United States for media organisations such as Loan Pricing Corp, Risk.net, the Associated Press and National Public Radio. She is from Taiwan and holds a master of science degree in journalism from Northwestern University.
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