Skip to main content

Why Smart Card Market Growth Shifted

The smart card industry rarely makes front-page news. It operates in the background of nearly every financial transaction, mobile connection, and government identity interaction that billions of people conduct each day.

Yet what happens when a market of that scale quietly stops growing on volume and starts restructuring around value?

That is exactly the inflection point now unfolding across global smart card markets, and it carries strategic implications that extend well beyond card manufacturers and telecom suppliers.

For CIOs, CFOs, and payments executives, the structural forces reshaping this market are not abstract. They are actively influencing procurement timelines, technology refresh cycles, and vendor relationships across enterprise and financial services.

Key Smart Card Market Signals

According to the latest worldwide market study by ABI Research, global smart card shipments reached 8.32 billion units in 2025 and are forecast to rise only modestly to 8.46 billion by 2030.

That near-flat trajectory over a five-year horizon is the headline, but it obscures several diverging sub-market dynamics that matter more to decision-makers than the aggregate number.

SIM card shipments reached 4.08 billion in 2025, with eSIM device shipments accounting for 523.6 million, or 12.8 percent of total shipments. ABI's analyst projects that eSIM volumes will climb to just under 1.1 billion units by 2030, representing nearly 27 percent penetration.

That trajectory signals a fundamental remapping of how mobile connectivity is provisioned, managed, and monetized, with obvious implications for telecom operators, device manufacturers, and enterprise mobility teams managing large device fleets.

EMV payment card shipments declined to 2.94 billion in 2025, a 3.5 percent year-over-year drop, as elevated inventory levels and shifting re-issuance strategies weighed on demand.

Extended card expiry periods are reducing the replacement cycles that traditionally sustained payment card volumes, compressing a reliable revenue stream for issuers and their supply chain partners.

By contrast, government ID smart card shipments climbed to nearly 650 million units, up 5 percent year over year, reflecting accelerating investment in national digital identity programs across multiple geographies. 

This segment is increasingly resilient and politically prioritized.

In the secure IC market, NXP, STMicroelectronics, Infineon, and Samsung collectively held 74 percent of secure IC revenue market share in the first half of 2025, a concentration that reflects how market leadership in this space is now determined by scale, portfolio breadth, and the capacity to serve both traditional card and embedded security deployments simultaneously.

Outlook for Smart Card Market Development

The overarching message for senior executives is not that smart cards are declining. It is that the growth logic has changed fundamentally, and organizations still operating on legacy assumptions about replacement cycles, vendor relationships, and technology standards will find themselves misaligned with the market that is actually emerging.

For payments and banking executives, the reduction in EMV replacement volumes is not simply a supply chain issue. It reflects a structural compression of the traditional card issuance model.

Organizations that have built procurement and vendor management frameworks around predictable renewal cycles need to reassess those assumptions now, not when the next contract comes up for review.

For enterprise mobility and telecom service provider leadership, the eSIM trajectory is equally consequential. Moving from 12.8 percent to 27 percent penetration in five years represents a meaningful shift in how device identity, connectivity provisioning, and remote management are handled at scale.

Organizations that manage large mobile device fleets, whether for field operations, financial services, or logistics, should be actively building eSIM readiness into their infrastructure roadmaps rather than treating it as a future consideration.

ABI Research's own assessment is pointed: the smart card market is no longer defined by broad-based expansion, but by how effectively vendors adapt to structural change, with the transition to eSIM and extended payment card expiry periods expected to reduce traditional replacement volumes and force suppliers to rethink where future value will come from.

That vendor-side re-calibration has a direct corollary on the buyer side. Procurement teams and technology strategists should anticipate shifts in vendor pricing models, portfolio priorities, and service terms as suppliers navigate this transition.

The government ID segment offers a useful counterpoint.

Its 5 percent growth rate in 2025 reflects something the payments and SIM segments have temporarily lost: a clear policy mandate driving consistent demand. For technology vendors and systems integrators, the lesson is that regulatory and national security drivers can insulate certain market segments from broader volume pressures.

Following those mandates globally will increasingly define where smart card market growth actually concentrates.

The quiet inflection in smart cards is, at its core, a question about what your organization's identity and payments infrastructure strategy looks like in a world where physical credentials are gradually ceding ground to embedded and digital alternatives.

That being said, I believe the strategic choices made in the next 18 to 24 months will determine whether your organization leads that transition or reacts to it. Clearly, the market growth logic has already shifted.

Popular posts from this blog

Ultra-Wideband in Billions of New Devices

 Ultra-Wideband (UWB) is quietly becoming one of the most strategic short-range wireless technologies in the market, moving from niche deployments into the mainstream of smartphones, cars, and smart spaces. As the ecosystem matures and next-generation implementations arrive, UWB is shifting from nice-to-have to a foundational capability for secure access, sensing, and high-performance device-to-device connectivity. UWB Technology Market Development Unlike Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC, or legacy IEEE 802.15.4 implementations, UWB combines three powerful attributes in a single radio: secure ranging, radar-like sensing, and low-latency, high-throughput short-range data. This allows networking and IT vendors to architect experiences that blend precise location, context awareness, and rich interaction in ways traditional connectivity stacks cannot easily match. According to the latest worldwide market study by ABI Research, UWB is expected to be one of the fastest-growing wireless connectivity...