HUMO, Uzcard, Visa, Mastercard — a clean REST API that lets any developer start accepting payments in one day. No enterprise contracts. No weeks of bank bureaucracy.
{
"amount": 85000,
"currency": "UZS",
"method": "humo",
"order_id": "ord_9xKm2p",
"success_url": "https://shop.uz/thanks"
// sandbox: test HUMO flows instantly
}
{
"id": "pay_7fRn3",
"status": "pending",
"checkout_url": "https://pay.evano.io/7fRn3"
}
A clean REST API with full HUMO, Uzcard, Visa, and Mastercard support. Start accepting payments in one day. Sandbox live now.
REST APINo-code payment links for freelancers and small businesses. Create a link, share it on Telegram, get paid. No technical knowledge required.
No-codeA hosted payment page and embeddable JS widget for any online store. WooCommerce plugin included. Telegram bot integration ready.
EmbeddableInternational PSPs assume Visa and Mastercard are primary. They're not. HUMO and Uzcard process over 90% of domestic transactions in Uzbekistan. We support them first — not as an afterthought.
Digital payments went mainstream between 2020 and 2025. The habit is there. The infrastructure for builders is not.
Digital Uzbekistan 2030, Open Banking initiatives, and a Central Bank actively modernizing. The regulator wants this to happen.
Millions of people selling online — through Telegram, through small e-commerce stores — who have no simple way to collect money digitally.
No developer-focused payments platform exists in Central Asia. The companies here serve enterprise clients. The rest of the market is wide open.
The freelance designer in Tashkent who can't send a payment link to a client. The SaaS founder stuck in weeks of bank bureaucracy. The online store owner who can't embed a checkout in 10 minutes.
Stripe exists for the US. Razorpay exists for India. Evano is building that for Central Asia — starting in Uzbekistan, a market of 37 million people with one of the fastest-growing digital economies in the region.
We are not parachuting in from Silicon Valley. We are from here. We know the regulatory landscape, the local banking relationships, and most importantly, the pain our customers feel every day.