WooCommerce Payment Gateways — what you get
Choosing the right WooCommerce payment gateways is one of the biggest levers on conversion for a Gulf store — and the right answer is local. International cards alone leave money on the table, because shoppers across the GCC expect their national payment method at checkout and many will abandon if it is missing. Here is the country-by-country picture, plus how to choose.
United Arab Emirates
UAE stores typically combine a regional processor — Telr, PayTabs, or HyperPay — with international cards and Apple Pay. These handle AED natively, support Arabic checkout, and are well understood by local banks, which keeps approval rates high. Get the VAT display and TRN-compliant invoicing right at the same time. For region-specific builds see WooCommerce developer Dubai and Abu Dhabi.
Saudi Arabia
In Saudi Arabia, Mada — the national payment network — is essential; a store without it will lose a large share of buyers. Pair it with STC Pay (very widely used), Tap, and HyperPay, plus cards and Apple Pay. Saudi stores also need to keep ZATCA (Fatoorah) e-invoicing in mind on the commerce side. More on WooCommerce developer Riyadh.
Kuwait
KNET is the dominant local debit method in Kuwait and is effectively expected at checkout, alongside cards and Apple Pay. A KNET-ready store signals trust to Kuwaiti shoppers immediately. See WordPress developer Kuwait for KNET-ready builds.
Bahrain
BenefitPay leads in Bahrain and should be integrated alongside cards and Apple Pay. Bahrain’s fintech-forward, banking-heavy market makes a smooth, trusted, locally-correct checkout especially important for credibility — see WordPress developer Bahrain.
Qatar
Qatari stores generally combine regional and international gateways with cards and Apple Pay, pricing in QAR with clear documentation. The same principle applies — meet local expectations at checkout. See WooCommerce developer Doha.
How to choose the right mix
Three rules. First, match the gateway to where your customers actually are — the national method first, cards and Apple Pay as the universal layer. Second, confirm your bank or payment provider supports it and check the transaction fees and settlement times. Third, make sure it handles your currency and Arabic, right-to-left checkout cleanly, because a clumsy or English-only checkout undoes all the trust you built earlier. A fast, trusted, locally-correct checkout is the single biggest conversion lever in the Gulf — and I build all of it as part of WooCommerce development.