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AI in Oman

AI in Oman covers AI, startups, digital policy, investment, jobs, and Vision 2040 with reported stories, market analysis, practical guides, and ecosystem insights across Oman.

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Technology & AI
8 min read

Oman's AI Zone Goes Live and 5 Global AI Shifts from May 2026

From Oman's Royal Decree establishing a 104,000 sqm AI Special Zone to Google's billion-user AI Search and Anthropic's dynamic workflows, May 2026 was a month of structural change. Here's what every Omani business and developer needs to know.

Surah Al-BalushiJune 23, 2026

May 2026 will be remembered as the month AI moved from experiment to infrastructure. Oman issued a Royal Decree creating its own AI Special Zone. Google declared the "agentic era" at I/O with a billion users already in tow. Anthropic shipped parallel subagents for developers. And DeepSeek quietly made frontier-class AI permanently affordable for anyone. If you missed any of it, this recap has you covered.

Key Takeaways

🏛️ Oman's AI Special Zone: The Royal Decree That Changes Everything

The single most important AI development for Oman in May 2026 was not a product launch in San Francisco. It was Royal Decree No. 50/2026, issued on May 1 by His Majesty Sultan Haitham bin Tarik, which formally established an Artificial Intelligence Special Zone in Muscat Governorate, Wilayat of Seeb, adjacent to the Civil Aviation Authority building.

As Oman Observer reported, the zone spans approximately 104,000 square metres and operates under the Special Economic Zones and Free Zones Law, managed by OPAZ (Public Authority for Special Economic Zones and Free Zones). Target sectors include semiconductors, robotics, AI development, and global tech firms looking for a GCC base of operations.

The decree brings OPAZ's total portfolio to 24 zones, with committed investments now totalling RO 22.4 billion. The zone is directly tied to Oman Vision 2040 and the Eleventh Five-Year Development Plan (2026-2030).

"This zone represents a qualitative leap toward a digital economy and will position Oman as a regional hub for advanced technologies."

- Qais bin Mohammed al Yousef, Chairman of OPAZ

If you want deeper background on the zone's structure, the first major investor commitment of RO 100 million, and what the 104,000 sqm site means in practice, our earlier piece on Oman's new AI Special Zone covers the full picture. The May 1 decree represents the formal legal establishment following that initial announcement.

🌐 Google I/O 2026: The Agentic Era Is Officially Here

Google's annual developer conference on May 20 was a declaration, not a product update. The company formally announced the "agentic Gemini era" and backed it with substance.

According to Google's official I/O 2026 announcement, the headline launches included:

  • Gemini 3.5 Flash: Generally available via Gemini API and Google AI Studio, outperforming Gemini 3.1 Pro on coding benchmarks, built for long-horizon agentic tasks at lower cost than competing frontier models.
  • Gemini Omni: A new multimodal model that accepts text, image, video, and audio as input and can generate video output. It includes Google's SynthID digital watermark and is rolling out to AI Plus, Pro, and Ultra subscribers.
  • Google Antigravity 2.0: An agent-first development platform that includes a Managed Agents API, letting developers orchestrate multi-agent systems and provision remote Linux environments for long-running autonomous tasks.
  • AI Mode in Google Search has surpassed 1 billion monthly users, a milestone that signals AI-first search is now mainstream rather than experimental.

For Omani developers and businesses, the Antigravity 2.0 platform and Gemini 3.5 Flash pricing are the most immediately actionable. Gemini API credits are available through standard Google Cloud accounts, and several Omani technology firms are already Google Cloud partners.

⚡ Claude Opus 4.8: Dynamic Workflows for Developers

On May 28, Anthropic released Claude Opus 4.8. As detailed on Anthropic's official blog, the model lifted the agentic coding benchmark from 64.3 percent to 69.2 percent and pushed the browser-agent benchmark (Online-Mind2Web) to 84 percent.

The most significant developer-facing feature is dynamic workflows: Claude Code can now spin up parallel subagents to tackle large-scale engineering problems simultaneously, rather than working sequentially. For software development teams at Omani startups and government digital projects, this translates directly into faster iteration cycles on complex codebases.

The Fast mode pricing dropped to one-third of its previous cost, making Opus 4.8 meaningfully more accessible for API users. Pricing for the full model remains at $5 per million input tokens and $25 per million output tokens.

🤖 OpenAI Workspace Agents: Enterprise AI Goes Autonomous

On May 6, OpenAI ended the free trial period for Workspace Agents and moved to credit-based commercial pricing. According to OpenAI's official announcement, Workspace Agents are designed to replace custom GPTs for enterprise teams.

The distinction matters. Unlike custom GPTs, Workspace Agents run persistently in the cloud, can be shared across an entire organisation, and integrate natively with Slack, Salesforce, and other enterprise SaaS tools. They are available on ChatGPT Business, Enterprise, Edu, and Teachers plans.

For Omani companies already on Microsoft or Google enterprise licensing, the practical implication is that AI agents can now be deployed to handle internal workflows, from customer query routing to document processing, without requiring a dedicated AI engineering team to build and maintain them.

💰 DeepSeek Makes Its Price Cut Permanent

When DeepSeek launched V4 in late April with a 75 percent promotional discount, the industry assumed it was temporary. In May 2026, DeepSeek confirmed the pricing is permanent: $0.435 per million input tokens and $0.87 per million output tokens for V4 Pro.

To put that in context, DeepSeek V4 Pro costs approximately 34 times less per output token than GPT-5.5, while performing within striking distance of frontier closed models on coding and reasoning benchmarks. For Omani SMEs and developers who have been priced out of frontier AI capabilities, this is a structural shift rather than a promotional window.

DeepSeek's models are also available as open weights, meaning they can be self-hosted. Omani cloud infrastructure at OmanTel's data centres or through ITA-registered cloud providers can theoretically run these models domestically, which has implications for data sovereignty requirements in government digital projects.

🏆 The Gulf AI Race Accelerates

May 2026 also clarified where the Sultanate of Oman sits within a rapidly intensifying regional competition for AI leadership.

As CNBC reported on May 24, Saudi Arabia's HUMAIN (backed by the Public Investment Fund) is deploying at a scale that dwarfs most national programmes: an 18,000-unit order for NVIDIA GB300 GPUs beginning in 2026, a $5 billion AWS partnership to build its own AI zone, and an MOU with Qualcomm for edge-to-cloud AI silicon.

On the same day as Google I/O, UAE Minister Dr. Sultan Al Jaber announced that the UAE is entering what he called the "intelligent infrastructure" phase, with ADNOC deploying thousands of agentic AI and robotic applications across physical operations including pipelines, refineries, and autonomous inspections.

"The AI race is an electron race, and countries that can provide reliable, scalable, and affordable power will have a major competitive edge."

- Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, UAE Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology

Oman's answer to this regional context is the AI Special Zone, its growing renewable energy capacity, and its emerging position as a lower-cost, politically stable base for regional tech operations. Oman's cost advantage over Dubai is significant: as OmanVision2040 recently documented, Dubai is 52 percent more expensive than Muscat, a gap that matters when AI companies are calculating where to place their GCC hubs.

🇴🇲 How Omani Businesses and Developers Should Respond

DevelopmentImmediate Action for Oman
AI Special Zone (Royal Decree)Monitor OPAZ for investor registration timelines; relevant for tech firms considering a Muscat base
Gemini 3.5 Flash + Antigravity 2.0Evaluate Gemini API for agentic automation pipelines; existing Google Cloud accounts get API access today
Claude Opus 4.8 Dynamic WorkflowsDevelopment teams should pilot Claude Code for parallel engineering tasks; Fast mode is now 3x cheaper
OpenAI Workspace AgentsEnterprise firms on ChatGPT Business plans should audit internal workflows suitable for persistent agents
DeepSeek Permanent PricingSMEs should benchmark DeepSeek V4 against GPT-5.5 on their specific tasks; 34x cost difference is meaningful at scale
Gulf AI RaceOmani startups should actively position the AI Special Zone and cost advantage in investor pitches targeting GCC VCs

Why This Matters for Oman

May 2026 gave Oman two things simultaneously: a formal legal infrastructure for attracting global AI investment (the Special Zone), and a global toolset that has never been more affordable or capable (Gemini 3.5, Opus 4.8, DeepSeek V4). The Sultanate does not need to choose between being an AI destination and being an AI adopter. The conditions now exist to do both.

The challenge, as always, is speed of execution. Saudi Arabia is ordering tens of thousands of GPUs. The UAE is deploying AI into physical infrastructure at scale. Oman's competitive edge is its stability, its cost structure, and the proximity of its new AI zone to existing logistics corridors. Converting those advantages into signed investors and deployed projects before the regional window narrows is the task for the months ahead.

Artificial IntelligenceOman Vision 2040TechnologyGoogleAnthropic
Technology & AI
5 min read

Oman Goes Cashless: CBO Makes All Digital Transfers Free

The Central Bank of Oman will waive all local digital transfer fees for retail customers and SMEs from July 1, 2026 — a direct cost cut for every business and individual banking in the Sultanate.

Editorial TeamJune 21, 2026

The Central Bank of Oman (CBO) announced on June 17, 2026 that all local digital fund transfers will carry zero fees for retail customers and small and medium-sized enterprises, starting July 1. It is one of the most practical digital economy moves the Sultanate of Oman has made in years, and its effects will ripple through every business that sends or receives money through Omani banks.

💳 What Exactly Changed

According to an announcement published by Oman Observer on June 17, the CBO has eliminated charges across the three core rails of Oman's national payment infrastructure:

Payment SystemWhat It IsNew Fee
RTGSReal-Time Gross Settlement — large-value interbank transfersOMR 0
ACHAutomated Clearing House — batch transfers and payroll runsOMR 0
MPCSS / IPSInstant Payment System — real-time P2P via mobile number or aliasOMR 0

As Muscat Daily reported, the waiver applies to transfers made through digital banking apps, online banking portals, and e-wallets — covering both same-bank and cross-bank transactions within Oman. The one boundary: international transfers are outside the scope of this announcement.

"By removing cost barriers for retail customers and SMEs, we are encouraging wider adoption of secure, efficient and accessible digital payment solutions."

- Ahmed Al Musalmi, Governor, Central Bank of Oman

🏪 Merchants Get a Meaningful Cut Too

For businesses that accept payments at point of sale, the CBO has reduced the merchant service fee on QR-code "Scan and Pay" transactions from 0.75% to 0.50%, with a cap of OMR 2 per transaction. That is a 33% reduction in acceptance costs for QR-based payments — relevant for restaurants, retailers, and any business using Oman's national QR infrastructure.

The Maal domestic card scheme goes further. According to a second Oman Observer report, Maal has waived issuance, annual, and certification fees entirely, and its merchant service fees are approximately 50% lower than competing schemes. Direct debit and e-mandate services are now free of charge.

👩‍💼 Payroll Just Got Cheaper

Private-sector employers processing salaries through the Ministry of Labour's Wage Protection System will pay a flat maximum of OMR 1 per month, regardless of how many employees are on the payroll or how many ACH files are submitted. Previously, each transfer batch carried a per-file fee. For companies running weekly payroll cycles or paying hundreds of staff, this is a noticeable saving.

🚀 Why Startups and SMEs Feel This Most

Oman's SME sector has more than 300,000 registered businesses, and the vast majority operate on tight margins. Even fees measured in fractions of an omani rial compound quickly when a business processes dozens of transfers a week — supplier payments, client collections, payroll, inter-account sweeps.

Eliminating those costs entirely changes the arithmetic of running lean. A SaaS startup collecting monthly subscriptions via bank transfer, a logistics firm paying drivers weekly, a consulting firm invoicing government clients through RTGS — all of them move to a zero-cost payment stack on July 1.

This builds on other recent moves to lower the cost of running a tech business in Oman. As covered when it launched, the Sas for Excellence programme already offers qualifying Omani tech firms up to RO 1 million in direct financing alongside wage subsidies. The CBO fee waiver is a different layer of the same strategy: reduce friction at every touch point, not just at the financing level.

🎯 The Bigger Picture: Less Cash, More Digital Economy

Oman's Vision 2040 sets a target of raising the digital economy's contribution to GDP from roughly 2-3% today to 10% by 2040. Digital payments infrastructure is foundational to that target — you cannot build a thriving digital economy on top of a cash-dependent transaction layer.

According to Zawya, the CBO will monitor digital payment adoption throughout 2026 to track the impact on cash usage, cheque dependency, and payment service efficiency. That monitoring commitment signals this is the opening move in a sustained push, not a one-off policy gesture.

The timing matters. Oman has been systematically building the physical and regulatory infrastructure for a digital economy — AI zones, sovereign cloud, data centers, e-government portals. As OmanVision2040 documented in its review of the Sultanate's recent infrastructure completions, much of the hard work on underlying systems is now done. The payments layer has been the one area where user-facing costs still created friction. That changes on July 1.

🇴🇲 Why This Matters for Oman

Three groups should act before July 1:

  • Businesses still on cheque-based payroll now have a cost argument to finally switch. Zero-fee ACH removes the last financial objection.
  • Merchants still paying card acceptance fees should evaluate whether switching to Maal QR payments cuts their processing costs in half.
  • Fintech developers building payment-adjacent products for the Omani market should reprice their business cases upward. A zero-cost national payment rail is a platform, not just an infrastructure detail.

The broader signal is one of regulatory confidence: the CBO is willing to absorb short-term fee revenue in exchange for accelerating the structural shift toward digital transactions. For any business or investor watching Oman's digital economy from the outside, that is a meaningful data point about where the Sultanate of Oman is headed.

Digital PaymentsFintechCentral Bank of OmanSMEsDigital Economy

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