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FinTech has rapidly transformed financial systems in emerging economies by expanding access to digital payments, credit, savings, insurance, and investment services. Yet its real contribution to financial inclusion remains uneven due to infrastructural gaps, regulatory constraints, and demographic disparities. This study provides an empirical assessment of how key FinTech domains such as mobile money, digital lending platforms, biometric authentication, and alternative credit-scoring technologies influence inclusion outcomes across select emerging markets in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Using a cross-country dataset combining FinTech adoption indicators, financial access metrics, and demographic variables, the analysis evaluates the extent to which digital financial services reduce long-standing barriers faced by low-income households, women, rural communities, and micro-entrepreneurs. The results indicate that mobile-based financial services significantly increase account ownership and transaction frequency, while digital credit solutions widen access to formal borrowing for small businesses. However, the benefits are constrained by digital literacy gaps, cybersecurity vulnerabilities, unstable regulatory environments, and algorithmic biases in credit scoring. The study emphasizes the need for balanced policy frameworks, inclusive digital infrastructure, and consumer-protection norms that allow FinTech to advance equitable financial integration. Overall, FinTech shows strong potential to accelerate financial inclusion when supported by robust governance and targeted public-private collaborations.