Beyond bank loans, UAE businesses can tap flexible capital from alternative sources—useful for e-commerce and retail.
Peer-to-peer lending:
- Online platforms connect investors and SMEs
 - Faster approvals, transparent pricing
 - Platform fees and reporting requirements apply
 
Crowdfunding:
- Debt crowdfunding: borrow from many backers; fixed returns; good for working capital
 - Equity crowdfunding: sell shares; no repayments; give up ownership
 
Supply chain finance:
- Buyers extend terms while suppliers get paid early via bank/fintech
 - Improves working capital on both sides
 - Great for distributors and retail networks
 
Equipment finance and leasing:
- Islamic options: Ijara (leasing), Murabaha (cost-plus)
 - Conventional: loans and leases
 - Preserves cash and matches payments to asset life
 
Digital lending:
- Uses payment gateway and e-commerce data for underwriting
 - Products: POS finance, merchant advances, RBF, short-term WC
 - Approvals in days; funds in 24–72 hours
 
Islamic alternatives:
- Murabaha, Ijara, Tawarruq for Sharia-compliant financing
 - Competitive pricing and strong acceptance
 
Regulatory context:
- Free zones encourage fintech innovation
 - Central Bank oversight
 - KYC/AML and data privacy requirements
 
Choosing the right option:
- Speed vs cost
 - Collateral needs vs unsecured
 - Seasonality fit (RBF for variable revenue)
 - Data/reporting capability
 - Long-term capital strategy
 
Implementation tips:
- Start with small tranches
 - Diversify sources
 - Track ROI and costs
 - Keep lenders updated
 - Plan to graduate to bank facilities
 
Alternative financing offers speed and flexibility. Use it strategically, manage costs, and build a track record for larger future funding.