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Beyond Mobile Money: How Blockchain Infrastructure is Powering Africa’s Next Payment Revolution

Published September 3, 2025

Africa’s payment revolution began with mobile money, but it certainly won’t end there. In just over a decade, the continent has rewritten the global playbook on financial inclusion. With more than 1.1 billion registered mobile money accounts processing over $2 million per minute, Africa has demonstrated its extraordinary capacity for leapfrogging traditional banking models. Mobile money brought millions of unbanked people into the financial ecosystem, creating a platform for commerce, savings, and digital identity.

Yet, as this ecosystem matures, new cracks are appearing, structural challenges that mobile money alone cannot resolve. Settlement delays, reconciliation headaches, lack of interoperability, and cross-border frictions are now pressing concerns for businesses, regulators, and consumers. These issues demand a new kind of infrastructure—one that combines the inclusivity of mobile money with the resilience and scalability of blockchain networks.

This is where Africa’s next payment chapter is unfolding: through regulated blockchain infrastructure. These networks promise not just an upgrade but a transformation, enabling truly borderless, instant, and inclusive payments designed for Africa’s unique context.

Where Mobile Money Hits Its Limits

Settlement & Reconciliation Bottlenecks

African financial institutions still depend on legacy correspondent banking systems, which delay settlements for hours or even days. Businesses that accept payments from multiple providers face manual, error-prone reconciliation across different formats and timeframes.

For MSMEs, which make up 80% of Africa’s employment, these inefficiencies translate into tighter cash flow and higher costs.

Interoperability Challenges

Despite driving financial inclusion, mobile money remains fragmented. Providers operate closed systems, forcing customers to juggle accounts across networks.

This fragmentation creates barriers to commerce. A customer using one wallet often struggles to pay a merchant on another, and banks remain largely disconnected from mobile money ecosystems.

The result is a two-tiered system, mobile money on one side, banking on the other, with little integration to unlock advanced products like credit, savings, and insurance.

Cross-Border Payment Friction

Africa trades far less within itself compared to Asia or Europe, only 15% of trade is intra-African, largely because payments remain expensive and slow.

Cross-border mobile money transactions usually pass through correspondent banks, incurring high fees and delays. The continent collectively loses $5 billion every year to these inefficiencies.

Even promising initiatives like the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) still face limitations tied to legacy infrastructure and fragmented regulations.

Regulated Blockchain: Africa’s Next Infrastructure Layer

Blockchain offers solutions to these structural constraints by enabling decentralized settlement, automated reconciliation, and interoperability. But unlike public blockchains that prioritize decentralization at the expense of compliance, Africa is embracing regulated blockchain models.

Take Zone, Africa’s first regulated blockchain payment network licensed by the Central Bank of Nigeria. Zone run on a regulated blockchain infrastructure, ensuring every participant is compliant.

Key benefits include:

  • Same Day settlement.
  • Automated Reconciliation & Chargeback Prevention
  • True interoperability across providers.

Real-World Impact Across the Ecosystem

For Banks

  • Settlement shrinks from days to same day.
  • Reduced dependency on correspondent banks.
  • Smart contracts automate compliance checks and dispute resolution.

Banks can offer real-time payments domestically and, eventually, cross-border, boosting both customer trust and operational efficiency.

For Businesses

Blockchain improves cash flow and reduces costs. With instant settlement, businesses no longer wait days to access funds.

  • MSMEs can affordably accept smaller digital payments, reducing reliance on cash.
  • Blockchain infrastructure enables tools like automated invoicing, supply chain finance, and analytics that help businesses scale.

For Regional Trade

Africa has 28 domestic instant payment systems across 20 countries, but most operate in isolation. Blockchain can link them through shared standards, enabling seamless cross-border payments.

This supports the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) by lowering barriers for intra-African commerce. A merchant in Kenya could accept payment from a customer in Nigeria instantly without routing through costly foreign banks.

Implementation Realities

Of course, challenges remain:

  • Institutional adoption: Banks and fintechs must invest in integration, training, and phased rollouts. Early adopters may face higher costs until scale builds.
  • Regulatory coordination: Different countries have different rules on blockchain, digital currency, and payments. Harmonization under AfCFTA is progressing but will take time.

The Next Chapter

Africa redefined financial inclusion with mobile money. Now, it is ready to lead again with regulated blockchain infrastructure.

Zone’s pioneering implementation in Nigeria shows that blockchain can be both innovative and compliant, delivering instant settlement, lower costs, and interoperability across providers.

If scaled across the continent, regulated blockchain could:

  • Power intra-African trade.
  • Enable programmable money and digital finance products.
  • Position Africa as a global leader in blockchain innovation.

The leap from cash to mobile money was revolutionary.

The leap from mobile money to blockchain could be historic.

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