Nigeria’s fintech leader, Flutterwave Inc., has been granted a full banking license by Nigerian regulators, a development the company says will deepen its role in the country’s financial system and make digital payments more efficient for consumers, small businesses, and large enterprises.
For more than a decade, global payment companies, including Flutterwave, have typically operated under a sponsorship model, partnering with established banks to access national clearing and settlement systems. That approach has worked, but it can slow innovation and require fintech firms to share a portion of transaction value with their banking partners.
With its new license, Flutterwave gains greater autonomy over how funds move within its own network. It will still collaborate with other banks in Nigeria’s financial ecosystem, but the license enables the company to internalize key parts of its financial value chain, which executives say will improve operational efficiency and accelerate the development of new products.
“This milestone allows us to make our infrastructure more efficient and deliver faster, more reliable financial services,” said Olugbenga Agboola, Founder and Chief Executive of Flutterwave.
“By operating directly within the financial system, we can streamline money movement, accelerate settlement for merchants, and build products that support sustainable long-term growth.”
Industry analysts view Nigeria as one of Africa’s most dynamic and fast‑growing financial markets, with vast sums flowing through digital payment channels each year. Analysts estimate that trillions of naira circulate through these systems, underlining the importance of efficient settlement mechanisms and robust regulatory compliance.
By operating more directly as a licensed banking institution, Flutterwave says it will be better positioned to manage settlement flows, reduce transactional friction, and offer enhanced services to its wide network of merchants, partner businesses, and individual users.
The banking license allows Flutterwave to build a new generation of banking infrastructure that sits alongside its existing payment technology. Key areas of focus will include consumer financial services within the company’s SendApp ecosystem, business financial tools such as accounts and payroll management, and enterprise treasury services designed for sophisticated financial operations.
In addition to these core offerings, Flutterwave plans to integrate embedded financial services for digital platforms and provide developers with programmable financial infrastructure through application programming interfaces. These tools are designed to enable third‑party developers to build their own financial products on Flutterwave’s platform.
SendApp, Flutterwave’s mobile payments application with more than a million users, stands to benefit directly from the new license. Users will gain access to enhanced financial services, including personal account numbers and instant money transfers, within a single app experience. For more than two million businesses currently using Flutterwave’s payment services, the company says the license will enable new capabilities, such as opening business accounts, managing payouts, and running payroll functions without leaving the platform.
Flutterwave has also outlined plans to introduce data‑driven financial services, including working capital financing and merchant lending that leverage real transaction data. Treasury and savings products tailored to businesses across sectors are expected to follow, providing a broader suite of financial tools rooted in the company’s growing payments footprint.
Security and compliance will remain central to Flutterwave’s expanded operations. The company’s infrastructure is certified to the highest industry standards, including Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard Level 1 certification and compliance with SOC 1 and SOC 2 audit frameworks. It also employs enterprise‑grade fraud protection systems.
Since its inception, Flutterwave has processed more than 40 billion US dollars in payments and enabled over one billion unique transactions, a track record the company highlights as a testament to its role in supporting digital commerce across Africa and beyond.
The banking license comes as Flutterwave celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2026. In recent months, the company completed its acquisition of data connectivity provider Mono, strengthening its ability to link financial systems and infrastructure. As it enters this next phase, Flutterwave says it will continue to explore advanced technologies, including the possibility of stablecoin‑enabled settlement, to improve cross‑border transactions and connect African businesses more effectively with global markets.
Regulators and industry watchers will be observing how Flutterwave leverages its new license to shape the future of digital financial services in Nigeria and across the continent. With greater control of funds and settlement processes, the company appears poised to push deeper into traditional banking territory while maintaining its roots in nimble, innovative fintech solutions.