LG Pay is terminating its services this year, just six years after it was launched in South Korea. LG Electronic’s online payment system will cease operations after falling father from its rivals in the market, such as Naver Pay, Samsung Pay, and Apple Pay, which was only introduced in the country in March.
Pulse News reported that some business insiders said this week that LG Electronics is set to end LG Pay services on June 30. But then again, the operation of payment services applications may still continue for a while.
LG Electronics launched LG Pay in 2017 at a time when the online payment market in South Korea was still growing. The service was eventually expanded to foreign markets and landed in the United States first in 2019.
However, LG Pay failed to grow further as it lost its momentum after LG Electronics decided to shut down its smartphone unit in 2021. After the LG-branded phones were taken off the market, the mobile payment and digital wallet service was also shut down in the U.S. in that same year.
Although the payment service has been terminated in America, LG Electronics did not stop exploring other ways on how to continue its mobile payment system. It later decided to shift to a platform-based system similar to Kakao Pay and Naver Pay.
For this, it has teamed up with several card companies and extended its operations to web-based payments, which allowed LG Pay users to pay for their purchases online without the need to use any LG mobile phone.
Unfortunately, despite LG Electronic’s efforts in pushing the growth of its LG Pay, the payment system was not able to expand its user base. Finally, while the company is ending the service next month, the electronics firm said it will still review the business to see if it will still keep LG Pay after July 2024.


Asian Stocks Slide as AI Valuation Fears and BOJ Uncertainty Weigh on Markets
Ford Takes $19.5 Billion Charge as EV Strategy Shifts Toward Hybrids
SoftBank Shares Slide as Oracle’s AI Spending Plans Fuel Market Jitters
HSBC’s $13.6 Billion Take-Private Offer for Hang Seng Bank Gains Board Backing
Trump Sues BBC for Defamation Over Edited Capitol Riot Speech Clip
Biren Technology Targets Hong Kong IPO to Raise $300 Million Amid China’s AI Chip Push
Asian Technology and Chipmaking Stocks Slide as AI Spending Concerns Shake Markets
Bank of Japan Poised for Historic Rate Hike as Inflation Pressures Persist
Korea Zinc to Build $7.4 Billion Critical Minerals Refinery in Tennessee With U.S. Government Backing
Gold and Silver Surge as Safe Haven Demand Rises on U.S. Economic Uncertainty
Treasury Wine Estates Shares Plunge on Earnings Warning Amid U.S. and China Weakness
EU Court Cuts Intel Antitrust Fine to €237 Million Amid Long-Running AMD Dispute
Sanofi’s Efdoralprin Alfa Gains EMA Orphan Status for Rare Lung Disease
Robinhood Expands Sports Event Contracts With Player Performance Wagers
Nvidia Develops New Location-Verification Technology for AI Chips
RBA Unlikely to Cut Interest Rates in 2026 as Inflation Pressures Persist, Says Westpac 



