Three separate Iranian technology companies are scheduled to release major platform updates before the end of Q3 2026, according to product documentation reviewed by The Daily Tehran. The announcements, spread across the artificial intelligence, fintech and logistics sectors, mark the densest cluster of domestic tech launches the country has seen in a single quarter — and they land at a moment when the political calendar is rewriting the rules for everyone operating here.
The death of the Supreme Leader earlier this week has thrown a long shadow over every sector of Iranian public life, including the digital economy. Transition periods historically freeze procurement decisions, delay regulatory sign-offs and rattle investor confidence. Tehran's tech founders know this. Several told us, off the record, that they moved launch timelines forward precisely to get announcements on record before the institutional uncertainty deepens. The result is a compressed, high-stakes sprint toward market.
What's Coming and When
The most closely watched product is a new AI-assisted credit-scoring engine being developed by Hamrah Tejarat, a fintech firm headquartered in the Elahiyeh district of northern Tehran. Internal materials place the public beta at September 14, 2026. The engine is designed to assess loan eligibility for roughly 12 million unbanked Iranians — a figure drawn from Bank Markazi data published in late 2025 — who currently have no credit history recognised by formal lenders. The company has been operating out of a co-working campus on Vali-e-Asr Avenue since 2022 and employs just under 200 engineers.
At Pardis Technology Park, northeast of the city near the Alborz foothills, the state-backed accelerator program Fanap has confirmed a new developer toolkit for its payment infrastructure, Shetab-compatible and designed to let third-party apps plug into Iran's national interbank network with significantly less compliance friction. Fanap told partners the toolkit will ship in public release on October 1. Developers who attended last month's closed briefing at the park's Building 4 describe it as the most significant update to the stack since 2021.
Digikala, the e-commerce platform that processes more than 65 percent of Iran's domestic online retail orders by volume, is preparing a same-day logistics product for addresses within Tehran's Ring Road. Pilots ran through May and June across Districts 2 and 6. A full commercial rollout is pencilled in for mid-August, just before the back-to-school spending cycle. Delivery fees for the new tier are expected to sit at around 85,000 rials per order — roughly a quarter of what courier aggregators currently charge for comparable speed.
The Infrastructure Underneath
None of this runs on air. The Ministry of Information and Communications Technology has been quietly expanding Iran's national data centre capacity since early 2025, with the second phase of the Shahid Mahalati Data Centre complex near Karaj coming online in March 2026, adding 40 megawatts of operational capacity. That extra headroom matters enormously for AI workloads, which are compute-hungry in ways that older fintech and logistics platforms were not.
Connectivity is a more complicated story. Fixed broadband penetration in Tehran reached 71 percent of households as of the ICT Ministry's April 2026 survey, but average speeds lag well behind comparable cities in the region. Mobile data quality has improved since the rollout of additional 5G spectrum in Districts 3 and 7 last autumn, but coverage remains patchy in older residential neighbourhoods south of Enghelab Square.
The practical implication for developers watching these roadmaps: the companies with the best timing are those building for a 5G-first mobile experience in the city's northern and central districts, while offering a graceful fallback for LTE users everywhere else. Hamrah Tejarat, notably, has engineered its credit platform to function on connections as slow as 3G — a decision that looks prescient given how uneven rollout has been.
What happens next depends partly on who leads the country through and beyond the transition period, and what regulatory posture the new administration takes toward domestic tech. The ICT Ministry's current five-year digital economy plan runs until 2027 and allocates 180 trillion rials to infrastructure and startup grants. Whether that money flows on schedule, or gets caught in a bureaucratic freeze, is the question every product manager in Pardis and on Vali-e-Asr is now asking.