The Egyptian Deposit Insurance Corporation was established under Article 219 of Banking Law No. 194 of 2020 and is the statutory deposit-protection scheme for CBE-licensed commercial and cooperative banks. Membership is statutory: the National Bank of Egypt, Banque Misr, CIB (Commercial International Bank, EGX: COMI), QNB Alahli, and the broader set of CBE-licensed commercial and cooperative banks are all EDIC members, and an eligible EGP deposit at any of them sits inside the same statutory envelope. The original ceiling was EGP 50,000 per depositor per institution and was raised significantly in the 2021–2022 EDIC reforms; verify the current ceiling on cbe.org.eg or the EDIC administrator's official site before relying on a specific number, because the EGP-denominated headline has been periodically adjusted to track inflation and the figure that applied in 2020 is not the figure that applies today.
Mobile-wallet balances are not EDIC-covered when the wallet sits on a separate e-money licence. Vodafone Cash, Orange Cash, Phone Cash, and OPay Egypt are CBE-supervised under mobile-wallet / e-money rules, not under Banking Law 194/2020. Customer balances are held in segregated trust accounts at custody commercial banks; segregation protects funds from the failure of the wallet operator itself, but it is not deposit insurance and recovery in a wallet-operator failure depends on the trust-account arrangement and the custodian bank, not on the EDIC compensation scheme. The structural exception is wallet sub-products that sit inside a chartered bank's existing commercial-bank licence — Banque Misr's BM Wallet and CIB's Smart Wallet are operated on the parent commercial-bank charter rather than a separate EMI charter, so deposits booked against them are EDIC-covered through the parent. Verify the licence on the receiving entity on cbe.org.eg before treating any wallet balance as protected.
Sharia-compliant deposits sit under the same EDIC envelope. Egypt has both conventional and Islamic banking, and several CBE-licensed banks (including Faisal Islamic Bank of Egypt and Islamic windows at NBE, Banque Misr, and other commercial banks) offer Sharia-compliant fixed-yield products as an alternative to interest-bearing savings. Where the licence on the receiving entity is a CBE commercial-bank charter under Law 194/2020, EDIC cover applies the same way it does to a conventional deposit at the same institution. The product structure differs (profit-share rather than interest); the deposit-protection layer does not.
See the Africa regional hub for the broader sub-Saharan and North African cohort, and the CBE published licensee register for the authoritative list of EDIC-member institutions and the current scheme rules.