In today’s digital-first economy, the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region has emerged as a global hotspot for fintech innovation and digital commerce.
From e-commerce and digital subscriptions to SaaS and travel platforms, companies are increasingly turning to APAC as the frontier for their next phase of growth.
But behind this momentum lies a persistent operational challenge: cross-border payments.
For fintechs and merchants expanding across APAC, payments are no longer a backend utility — they’re a strategic lever impacting scalability, conversion rates, and customer satisfaction.
Yet, many businesses struggle with high transaction costs, fragmented infrastructure, and complex compliance.
Navigating the Fragmented APAC Market

APAC is often treated as a single region, but in reality, it is a collection of heterogeneous markets — each with its own currency, language, regulations, payment preferences, and banking infrastructure.
Digital-first companies in the region tend to scale quickly into neighboring markets.
A fintech launched in Singapore may look to serve Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand within a year.
A travel platform serving Korean customers may want to tap into Japanese and Southeast Asian travelers.
But with every new market comes an added layer of payment complexity.
“Cross-Border” Complexities
Unlike traditional multinational companies with local branches in each country, most fintech and digital businesses operate with leaner setups.
They might base operations in Singapore or Hong Kong and serve global customers remotely via digital channels.
Without local entities, transactions from Indonesia, Vietnam, or Malaysia are often processed via international acquiring, classifying them as cross-border transactions.
This triggers multiple challenges, including regulatory hurdles, higher MDRs (Merchant Discount Rates), FX volatility, and lower conversions as local payment methods and issuing banks are wary of non-local merchants.
What begins as a regional GTM strategy can spiral into a financial and operational maze.
Regulatory Headwinds
Each APAC country has its own digital commerce framework, from licensing and data storage to taxation and cross-border money movement:
• Indonesia and Vietnam have rules around onshore vs. offshore acquiring and data storage.
• Thailand and Malaysia have specific requirements for fund repatriation and invoicing.
• India has complex tax and compliance laws like GST, TDS, and OPGSP guidelines for exporters.
For fast-moving fintechs and digital-first businesses, interpreting and complying with each set of rules is often impractical.
Building local entities, securing licenses, opening bank accounts, and partnering with local acquirers for each market isn’t scalable.
A Regional Payments Strategy is No Longer Optional

To scale in APAC, merchants need more than local or bi-lateral setups. They need a cohesive regional payments strategy that enables them to:
• Support local payment methods (e.g., QRIS in Indonesia, PayNow in Singapore, GCash in the Philippines) and localised checkout
• Leverage domestic acquiring rails where possible to reduce MDRs and boost success rates
• Manage multi-currency FX exposure and reconciliation
• Ensure compliance with country-specific financial and data regulations
This is where Payment Orchestration steps in. No longer a buzzword, orchestration has become a foundational infrastructure layer.
Platforms like Juspay, an enterprise payment solutions provider, empower fintechs and merchants to operate with agility across the region, adapting to local nuances while maintaining centralised global control.
What is Payment Orchestration?
Payment orchestration is a unified technology layer that connects acquirers, payment methods, fraud tools, and compliance systems.
It represents a shift from passive payment processing to active control.
Through orchestration, businesses can centralise their payment infrastructure with a single integration – enabling them to dynamically route transactions, plug in new services, and optimise for cost, approval rate, and user experience.
The orchestration layer provides:
• Instant access to a network of local/global PSPs and APMs
• Smart transaction routing, retries, and fallbacks for higher success rates
• Regional compliance tooling, shielding businesses from regulatory exposure
• FX optimisation and preferred currency settlement
• Real-time monitoring, reporting, and decision-making dashboards
Orchestrated payment flows drive tangible, scalable results: faster go-live, localised checkout, improved success rates, and reduced operational load.
Real-World Impact: The ROI of Orchestration
Scenario 1: A travel platform based in Singapore expands to serve Korean and Japanese customers
Without orchestration: The merchant uses a Singapore-based PSP, checkout lacks local payment options, success rates drop, MDRs spike.
With orchestration: Dynamic localisation to display local payment methods (e.g., Konbini in Japan, Tmoney in South Korea) in a brand-customised checkout page that supports regional languages, routes through domestic acquirers, and automates FX and VAT compliance.
Scenario 2: An Indian SaaS firm wants to scale across SEA
Without orchestration: Requires multiple PSP contracts & integrations, inconsistent tax & compliance handling, fragmented dispute resolution.
With orchestration: Single integration provides region-wide PSP and APM access, automates tax compliance, and consolidates payment data.
Way Forward: Orchestrating Borderless Commerce

Cross-border payments in APAC are inherently complex, but they don’t have to be a bottleneck for growth.
With the right orchestration strategy, fintechs and digital businesses can expand faster, reduce costs, stay compliant, and deliver localised customer experiences.
The future of APAC commerce is borderless — and payments need to catch up.
If you’re building a business that wants to grow across APAC, it’s time to stop thinking of payments as a cost center.
Instead, treat it as a strategic lever — one that, when orchestrated well, can unlock scale at speed.
Featured image: Edited by Fintech News Singapore, based on image by ttonaorh via Freepik