UAE Digital Vehicle Insurance Renewal via Shory

The insurance sector in the UAE has taken another forward step in digital transformation, with the launch of digital vehicle insurance renewals by Shory, a fintech-insurance platform. Fintechnews Middle East This development reflects how insurance in the Gulf is increasingly bein

Tom Whitmore

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Tom Whitmore

Published

Nov 17, 2025

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1 min

UAE Digital Vehicle Insurance Renewal via Shory

The insurance sector in the UAE has taken another forward step in digital transformation, with the launch of digital vehicle insurance renewals by Shory, a fintech-insurance platform. Fintechnews Middle East
This development reflects how insurance in the Gulf is increasingly being delivered via digital channels, aligning with broader government mandates on smart services and customer-experience upgrades.

What the product is

Shory has launched a service that allows customers to renew their vehicle insurance entirely digitally—no paper, no branch visits, and presumably seamless through mobile or online portals. The service is available via the “TAMM 4.0” platform (the UAE government’s unified services portal). The link to government services underscores the convergence of private insurance firms and national digital strategies. Fintechnews Middle East

Why this matters

    Industry implications

    Insurers operating in the UAE (and broader Gulf) face several pressures:

      Challenges

        What to watch

          Conclusion

          The launch of digital vehicle insurance renewals in the UAE by Shory is a timely development—and one that encapsulates how the insurance sector in the Gulf is evolving from traditional models to digitally empowered, consumer-centric ones. For customers, it means less friction and more convenience; for insurers, it signals a transition opportunity—but one that must be managed carefully with respect to trust, data and integration. The Gulf insurance market is increasingly becoming a digital battleground, and this move is one more stride forward.

          Tom Whitmore

          Written by

          Tom Whitmore

          Senior correspondent · Technology & Energy

          Tom trained as an electrical engineer, which makes him unusually patient with infrastructure stories. He reports on AI, cloud, the energy transition, and the businesses turning frontier engineering into real cash flow. Previously he covered the chip supply chain from Taipei. Skeptical of slide decks; comfortable in a substation. Based in Singapore. Reach out at tom.whitmore@theplatinumcapital.com.