Six trends shaping the future of financial transactions in Africa
Africa is rapidly becoming a laboratory for payment innovation.
By Standard Bank
Africa is rapidly becoming a laboratory for payment innovation, where regional corridors, mobile-led economies, and digitally savvy consumers are converging to transform how money moves.
With a growing focus on real-time, frictionless payments and regional integration, the continent’s financial future is being rewritten, one transaction at a time.
“Payment systems have increasingly become the heartbeat of Africa’s economic growth and financial inclusion, largely driven by a once-in-a-generation shift driven by technology, policy reforms and consumer demand,” says Crosby Mkwanazi, Head of Transaction Banking at Standard Bank Corporate and Investment Banking.
Standard Bank’s latest white paper, Payments in Africa, outlines six defining trends that are shaping the future of financial transactions on the continent:
1. Payment corridors in sub-Saharan Africa
Africa is building momentum in intra-continental trade, driven by regional payment systems and integration frameworks.
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is central to this shift – projected to boost intra-African trade by 52% once fully implemented. Yet, currently, intra-African trade sits at just 18% of total African exports, compared to 70% in Europe and 52% in Asia.
Initiatives such as Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS), the East African Payments System (EAPS), and the Southern African Development Community Real Time Gross Settlement (SADC-RTGS) system are enabling faster, cost-effective settlement of cross-border transactions. Meanwhile, remittance flows, critical to many African economies, reached $55 billion in 2023, with Nigeria alone accounting for $20 billion. These corridors power trade, while funding education, health care and entrepreneurship for millions.
2. Frictionless payments
Africa’s shift towards digital payment modes is gaining speed. Cashless payment volumes are expected to grow by 78% by 2025, driven by smartphone penetration, declining data costs, and changing consumer behaviour.
Over 70% of Sub-Saharan Africa’s population is under the age of 30. These are digital natives who demand instant, intuitive and seamless financial experiences.
Biometric verification, contactless payments, QR codes, and embedded finance are becoming the norm, not the exception. Mobile wallets alone are projected to account for more than $314 billion in transaction value in Sub-Saharan Africa by 2025.
3. Opportunities and challenges in the African payments arena
Africa presents a duality: a market of immense opportunity and undeniable complexity. While mobile money and fintech have accelerated financial inclusion, banks must navigate rising regulatory scrutiny, cybersecurity risks, and disruptive new players. Those that embrace open banking frameworks, digitised Know Your Customer (KYC) processes and harmonised compliance models will be best positioned to scale sustainably.
“To lead, banks must embrace innovation while staying agile in the face of regulatory change,” adds Mkwanazi.
4. Instant payments: The heartbeat of Africa
Mobile payments have leapfrogged traditional financial infrastructure, with over 80 billion transactions worth $1.1 trillion processed in 2024 alone.
“Africa didn’t follow the world into mobile payments – we led,” says Mkwanazi.
Instant payments now anchor economic activity, enabling credit scoring, digital IDs and public-private governance systems. The next step is a pan-African real-time interoperable network.
5. Platforms, ecosystems and partners
The future of banking in Africa lies in developing ecosystems. From WeChat-style super apps to BaaS (banking-as-a-service) models, platform strategies enable exponential scale.
Global players are positioning themselves to capture market share, but local incumbents still hold the edge.
“African organisations can build platform-based models rooted in trust, regulation and local relevance, turning scale into sustainability,” says Mkwanazi.
The success of digital platforms like M-Pesa and Flutterwave highlights the power of combining financial services with everyday ecosystems.
6. Optimising liquidity in Africa
Consumer spending in Africa has grown by 3.9% annually since 2010 and is expected to hit $2.1 trillion by 2025. Yet, much of this demand is met through imports, putting pressure on foreign currency reserves and leading to liquidity constraints.
To navigate rising interest rates and currency volatility, corporates are increasingly turning to real-time liquidity solutions, cash concentration structures and modern working capital tools. Africa’s corporates are learning to thrive in constrained environments through smarter treasury and cash flow strategies.
These insights were shared during the Standard Bank’s media roundtable, where senior executives unpacked how Africa’s payments transformation is creating new pathways for inclusive growth, regional trade, and financial innovation.
As the continent continues to digitise and integrate, the payments sector will remain at the heart of Africa’s growth story – instant, intelligent, and intrinsically African.