Highlighting a significant momentum in the country's push toward a cashless society, the nationwide mandatory rollout of the unified "Bangla QR" payment standard recorded 77,165 transactions amounting to Tk22.02 crore over a span of just two days, central bank data showed.
The transactions were registered on 30 June and 1 July, marking the official eve and day of the central bank's deadline for financial institutions to fully transition to the standardised system.
According to Bangladesh Bank, the introduction of the standardised, interoperable Quick Response (QR) code aims to fundamentally restructure retail payment infrastructure, phase out cash dependencies, and foster a more efficient digital financial ecosystem.
Unified payment standard for small and large merchants
Developed by the central bank under the National Payment Switch Bangladesh (NPSB) platform, Bangla QR serves as a single "one country, one QR" payment mechanism. The primary technological advantage is its low-cost infrastructure. Instead of expensive Point of Sale (POS) card terminals, merchants—ranging from large retail malls to roadside micro-vendors and street hawkers—only require a printed QR code sticker to receive digital payments.
Previously, merchants had to display multiple QR codes issued by individual banks or Mobile Financial Service (MFS) providers. The new mandatory guidelines ensure complete interoperability, allowing a customer using any participating bank app or MFS wallet (such as bKash or Nagad) to scan a single universal code.
Cost caps and consumer security
To further incentivise the digital transition and promote affordable access, Bangladesh Bank issued a fresh circular on 1 July, capping the maximum Merchant Discount Rate (MDR) at per cent (including VAT) for transactions channelled via Bangla QR. This fixed rate applies across bank accounts, debit, credit, or prepaid cards, and MFS platforms.
Addressing social media speculation regarding additional operational expenses, Bangladesh Bank spokesperson Arif Hossain Khan clarified that the payment service is entirely free for consumers.
"Consumers can make purchases through Bangla QR without paying any charge. The transaction fee applies strictly to merchants and cannot be legally passed down to the customers," the spokesperson stated, adding that asking buyers to pay extra violates official payment guidelines.
The central bank expects that moving retail trade into recorded digital channels will gradually reduce the informal footprint of the economy, improve financial transparency, mitigate risks associated with physical cash handling or card cloning, and significantly boost the country's tax-to-GDP ratio.
Bangla QR / Record / Bangladesh Bank
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