Nigerian fintechs banking strategies signal a structural shift as Flutterwave and Paystack move into core banking. The post Nigerian Fintechs Banking: From PaymentsNigerian fintechs banking strategies signal a structural shift as Flutterwave and Paystack move into core banking. The post Nigerian Fintechs Banking: From Payments

Nigerian Fintechs Banking: From Payments to Full Service

2026/05/22 15:04
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Nigerian fintechs banking strategies are evolving rapidly, as the country’s leading digital payments firms push decisively into core banking services.

Nigeria’s most prominent digital payments firms are pushing decisively into core banking, signalling a structural shift in how money moves and is stored in Africa’s largest economy. As these strategies evolve, regulators are treating the biggest platforms less as start-ups and more as systemically important financial infrastructure, with expectations to match.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has in recent years tightened its regulation of large payment platforms and mobile money operators, reflecting their growing importance within the financial system, even though it has not formally designated them as systemically important institutions. That shift has gone hand in hand with a broader policy push to use licensed fintechs to deepen financial inclusion and strengthen cross-border payment links across Africa. For investors, this is recasting some of Nigeria’s best-known fintech names as emerging full-service financial institutions rather than narrow payments gateways.

Flutterwave, Paystack move from rails to balance sheets

Flutterwave has expanded its regulated activities in Nigeria and other markets through payment and remittance licences, but it has not publicly announced obtaining a full Nigerian banking licence as of now.

The company has secured approvals to operate as a payments processor and international money transfer operator in Nigeria, but there is no evidence it has secured approval to operate as a deposit‑taking bank. Flutterwave, founded in 2016 and widely reported to be valued at about US$3bn after successive funding rounds, is positioning its licensed capabilities as the backbone of a broader suite of services for businesses.

The group plans to let business customers open accounts, accept and send payments, manage payouts, run payroll, and operate across currencies from a single platform. It will also offer lending and working capital, using real transaction data to assess creditworthiness and tailor facilities. That approach aligns with a global trend where high-volume payments processors turn their data advantage into risk insights and balance-sheet products.

Paystack, launched in 2015 and acquired in 2020 by US payments major Stripe in a deal reported to be worth more than US$200m, built its brand on simple APIs for online merchants. There is currently no public record that Paystack has acquired a microfinance bank or launched a licensed entity called Paystack Microfinance Bank in Nigeria.

Paystack’s payments business continues to run as a separate entity. The company’s transaction data on merchants nonetheless positions it to potentially offer loans, overdrafts, working capital finance and, over time, investment and wealth management products to merchants whose transaction histories it already holds. The ability to underwrite credit from live cash-flow data rather than collateral gives it a natural edge with smaller, fast-moving businesses.

Data, inclusion and the race for deposits

Nigeria’s authorities see these players as partners in pushing finance deeper into the informal and gig economies. Microfinance and payment-service banks are core to the CBN’s financial inclusion strategy, which targets tens of millions of under-banked citizens. By licensing and closely supervising the largest platforms, regulators aim to harness their distribution while managing systemic risk.

Moniepoint Microfinance Bank, Kuda, OPay and PalmPay have already built large customer bases among market traders, logistics operators and online merchants by offering fast account opening, low-cost transfers and merchant devices at scale.

Many operate under microfinance or payment-service bank licences, which permit deposit-taking; microfinance banks can extend credit under prudential limits, while payment service banks are largely restricted from lending and face tight constraints on other forms of risk-taking. As these firms grow, the regulatory expectation is that systemically relevant ones will meet higher capital and governance standards similar to traditional banks.

The strategic prize is no longer only payments volume. Deposits, foreign exchange services, credit, and eventually investment products are the battlegrounds where Nigerian fintechs banking strategies collide with incumbents. With detailed transaction data on millions of small merchants and freelancers, the leading fintechs can price risk in segments that commercial banks long struggled to serve efficiently. At the same time, banks retain strengths in corporate banking, trade finance and low-cost funding from established deposit franchises.

For institutional investors, the shift signals a maturing ecosystem. The first wave was pure payments; the next is regulated, data-driven financial institutions with diversified revenue streams and higher regulatory overhead. Equity and debt investors will need to track how quickly these platforms convert payments flows into sticky deposits and scalable lending books, and how the CBN calibrates capital, licensing and cross-border rules as they grow.

The next phase of value creation in Nigeria’s fintech sector will depend on which players best balance regulatory expectations with innovation in serving Africa’s vast base of small businesses and digital workers.

The post Nigerian Fintechs Banking: From Payments to Full Service appeared first on FurtherAfrica.

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