If you are a product or IT lead at an Algiers fintech, bank, or public body, you know launching a mobile app in the Algerian context is harder than in any other MENA country. CIB authentication, Bank of Algeria regulation, SATIM requirements, Arabic and French coexisting — terrain that destroys inexperienced mobile teams.
This page is not a pitch. It is a portrait of how serious mobile engineering actually works in the Algerian capital, and why we are one of the few workshops that ships apps that pass both the Apple/Google validation and the Algerian regulatory constraints.
Why mobile engineering in Algiers is different
Launching a mobile app in Algiers is not like launching one in Casablanca, Tunis, or Dubai. Three things fundamentally change the profile of the project: payments (CIB, Edahabia, SATIM integration), Bank of Algeria regulation on financial services, and Arabic-French bilingual handling that is not optional.
On top, market constraints: Algerian users have on average older phones, connectivity is uneven across wilayas, and usage patterns are not those of European markets. An app designed for Paris often dies in production in Algiers for these three reasons combined.
« A mobile app that has to integrate CIB, Edahabia, Yalidine, and the Bank of Algeria is not a simple app. It is an integration project disguised as an application. »
What we deliver in Algiers
Our mobile engagements in Algiers focus on four categories.
First: fintech and banking apps. Account opening, KYC, transfers, bill payments, CIB and Edahabia integration, Bank of Algeria compliance.
Second: public service apps. Document requests, file tracking, tax payments, appointment booking. For ministries, municipalities, public bodies.
Third: internal business apps for large groups. Fleet management, field tracking, mobile sales, inventory.
Fourth: consumer apps — delivery, retail, loyalty — for Algerian brands selling in Algeria and beyond.
The same rigor for the bank and the pre-seed startup
Our most visible client this year is an Algiers financial institution. Our most technically complex app integrates five different banking systems. But on the same calendar, we are delivering an app for an 8-person Algiers startup that has not raised funding yet.
This is intentional. The same design process, the same testing cycle, the same App Store/Play validation. We take the same precautions on security, performance, and accessibility.
What we adapt is scope, not rigor. A startup needs a v1 that works, passes the store, and can evolve. That is exactly what we deliver.
« A 4.7 rating on Play Store in Algeria is not a detail. It is the difference between 1,000 users and 100,000. »
How we work with Algiers stakeholders
Our mobile team is in Algiers. For engagements in the capital, we are on-site. We work native (Swift, Kotlin) for critical apps and cross-platform (Flutter, React Native) when it is the right economic choice.
We publish apps directly on the App Store and Google Play from our developer accounts or the client's. We handle the entire chain: signing certificates, provisioning profiles, screenshots, store descriptions, update management, post-launch support.
For financial apps, we work under NDA and on isolated development infrastructure. We apply the same security standards as European banks — end-to-end encryption, certificate pinning, biometrics, anti-tampering.
Apps that stay in production
Several of the apps we have delivered in Algiers since 2020 are still in production today, with tens of thousands of active users. An app that does not survive three years was never an app — it was a prototype.
This concerns you directly: you work with a team that has seen several versions of the Algerian market, that knows what works in production, and that can spare you the common mistakes.