It was the latest in a series of deadly attacks to hit the city and comes three months after a massive truck bomb ripped through the same area, killing about 150 people.
The bomb went off outside the Kabul Bank, which usually pays the salaries of security forces personnel and government employees.
"The latest report shows five, including a guard, were killed and eight civilians were wounded in today's terrorist attack," said interior ministry spokesman Najib Danish.
The blast happened today morning at a time when many officials were expected to be collecting their salaries ahead of this week's Eid al-Adha holiday.
It shattered the bank's exterior, mangling metal beams and covering the street outside with shattered glass and splattered blood.
"I was driving when I heard a big boom. The blast was so strong that it broke the windows of my car. I saw people shouting and crying near the bank," a witness told AFP.
The blast occurred on a street lined with shops and banks leading to Massoud Square, near the United States embassy and Kabul's diplomatic area.
The blast resembled a Taliban attack in June during the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan, when a car bomb targeted civilians and government employees queueing outside a Kabul Bank branch to collect their salaries in Lashkar Gah in Helmand province.
That blast killed 29 people and wounded over 60.
Since NATO forces ended their combat mission in Afghanistan at the end of 2014, Afghan troops and police have struggled to beat back the resurgent Taliban, while facing the growing threat of the Islamic State group.
On May 3 a powerful blast targeting a foreign forces convoy near the US embassy and NATO headquarters killed at least eight people and wounded 28 during morning rush hour.
Later in the month a massive truck bomb tore through Kabul's diplomatic quarter, home to the presidential palace and a host of foreign embassies, killing about 150 and wounding around 400 people, mostly civilians.
And on June 3 seven people died when suicide bombers attacked the funeral of a protester who was killed the day before during a demonstration against insecurity in Kabul.
Afghan authorities welcomed Trump's decision, while in neighbouring Pakistan officials batted away claims by the US president that Islamabad continued to harbour militant sanctuaries.
Earlier this week Pakistan postponed a visit by a US diplomat who had been due to arrive yesterday.
It later announced talks with China's special envoy on Afghan affairs at which the Chinese official "lauded Pakistan's contribution and sacrifices made in the fight against terrorism", according to a statement.
On Friday they claimed a suicide bomb and gun attack on a Shiite mosque that killed 28 worshippers.
They also killed two in an attack on the Iraqi embassy earlier this month.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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