Binance’s expansion in Kenya marks a change in how crypto fits into everyday payments. Users can now convert assets such as Bitcoin, USDT, and USDC into balances that move directly through M-PESA and settle into bank accounts, including those of KCB Group, the country’s largest bank by assets.
Crypto transactions are shifting from informal workarounds into the same payment channels people already use daily.
Until now, most crypto on- and off-ramps in Kenya ran through Binance’s peer-to-peer marketplace. That system relied on user trust rather than formal rails, but it quietly grew large thanks to M-PESA’s role as the default tool for local payments and transfers.
The new setup connects Binance directly to M-PESA TILL and PAYBILL systems. Value can move from digital assets into merchant accounts and mobile wallets without manual steps. What once happened on the margins now shows up inside familiar payment flows.
This fits with broader moves in Kenya’s financial sector. KCB’s push into digital payment firms like Pesapal reflects how banks are folding mobile and online payments deeper into their core services.
Regulation is still catching up; nevertheless, rules for virtual asset providers remain a work in progress, but everyday use has already outpaced formal oversight.
For many users, crypto payments are no longer experimental because these transactions now pass through mainstream systems, and this suggests that digital assets are becoming part of routine economic activity, not just a trading sideline.