Flutterwave has announced a major strategic shift following the acquisition of a banking licence in Nigeria, marking what the company describes as the beginning of a new phase in its mission to reshape financial infrastructure across Africa.
The fintech firm said its founding goal was to solve long-standing challenges in Africa’s payments ecosystem, where cross-border transactions were often slow, unreliable, and fragmented. Over the years, it built payment rails that enabled businesses to move money more efficiently across markets, supporting both global companies and African enterprises expanding beyond their home countries.
Flutterwave stated that it has processed more than 1 billion transactions and moved over $40 billion in value, serving over 2 million businesses across its network. The company has grown into one of the most licensed non-banking financial institutions on the continent, helping to power payments for firms such as Uber, Netflix, Microsoft, Air Peace, PiggyVest, and The Delborough.
However, the company noted that while it had built strong infrastructure on top of existing systems, it remained limited by external banking rails. With its new Nigerian banking licence, Flutterwave says it is now moving “into the core of the system,” giving it greater control over settlement speed, product design, and end-to-end financial operations.
The company explained that this shift will allow it to unify previously fragmented services such as accounts, payments, payouts, and capital management into a single integrated financial ecosystem. It also outlined plans to expand its consumer, business, enterprise, developer, and marketplace offerings through enhanced banking capabilities.
For consumers, Flutterwave’s SendApp is expected to evolve into a full digital banking companion, offering features such as instant local and cross-border transfers, account numbers, wallets, and upcoming tap-to-pay functionality. For small businesses, the platform will support business accounts, payments processing, payroll, vendor payouts, and multi-currency operations within a single system.
Large enterprises will gain access to tools for treasury management, large-scale disbursements, and API-driven financial integration, while developers will be able to build directly on Flutterwave’s infrastructure to create new financial products. Marketplaces and platforms will also be able to manage vendor accounts, automate payouts, and handle split payments more efficiently.
The company further emphasized its growing focus on embedded financial services, including working capital loans, merchant financing, and data-driven credit products, alongside treasury and savings tools designed to help businesses manage liquidity.
Flutterwave also highlighted its commitment to regulatory compliance, noting its existing PCI DSS Level 1 certification and SOC 1 and SOC 2 compliance. It said risk management, fraud detection, and governance systems are being strengthened to meet bank-grade standards as it expands its offerings.
The company described the development as the start of a broader transformation from a payments infrastructure provider into a full-scale financial platform, with Nigeria remaining central to its long-term strategy.
Flutterwave said the goal is to accelerate settlement, improve financial control for businesses, and build a unified system that reflects the growing complexity and ambition of Africa’s digital economy.






