Buy Now Pay Later in Africa: The Fastest-Growing Fintech Trend Everyone Should Be Watching

Africa’s Buy Now Pay Later market is exploding, with GMV projected at $5.34B in 2025.

Sebastian Hills
7 Min Read

Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) has outgrown its status as a fringe payment option in Africa. But behind the glossy headlines and investor decks, a deeper story is unfolding, one that reveals BNPL as the continent’s fastest-expanding fintech frontier, projected to hit $5.34B GMV by 2025 and accelerating at rates that outpace even global peers.

In markets like Nigeria, Kenya, Egypt, and South Africa, BNPL is not merely spreading; it is surging, with year-on-year growth between 20–40%, forcing regulators, investors, and policymakers to confront a credit transformation few saw coming.

What’s driving this sudden rush? A perfect storm beneath the surface.

The Credit Void

The investigation begins with a blunt reality: Africa’s traditional credit infrastructure is broken, or, for millions, nonexistent.

  • Credit card penetration: <5%
  • Bank loans: slow, collateral-heavy, often exclusionary
  • Inflation: eroding household liquidity
  • E-commerce: rising but still <10% of retail

A vast population sits between the need for credit and the inability to access it. BNPL slips directly into that chasm, offering what banks and card issuers never could: instant, flexible, mobile-first credit rails.

For policymakers, this exposes a systemic credit inclusion problem.
For investors, it signals billions in unmet demand.
For VCs, it suggests the birth of Africa’s next fintech giant.

How Buy Now, Pay Later Became Africa’s De Facto Digital Credit System

What appears at checkout pages is actually a much larger story: BNPL has evolved into an on-demand credit infrastructure, designed around the continent’s mobile-money-first realities.

Here are the data points policymakers and investors should be tracking:

  • 19.1% YoY growth in 2025, one of the fastest globally
  • $10.63B projected market by 2030
  • Growth rates 2–3× higher than mature BNPL markets
  • BNPL increases online sales 30–50%
  • Africa’s median age (19.7) skews heavily toward digital-first borrowing
  • Mobile-money ecosystems (M-Pesa, MoMo, Airtel Money) supercharge adoption

Meanwhile, Africa’s Buy Now, Pay Later journey has already evolved beyond basic online checkout.

Buy Now, Pay Later is now financing:

  • healthcare procedures
  • school fees
  • solar home systems
  • smartphones
  • travel
  • B2B inventory for SMEs

This is no longer a payment feature, it is the continent’s parallel credit distribution network.

The Power Centers

A closer look at the ground tells a nuanced story, not a single African Buy Now, Pay Later market, but a patchwork of regional ecosystems.

In South Africa

PayJustNow, Payflex (Zip Co), MoreTyme, Mobicred
→ Estimated $815M GMV in 2025

South Africa’s higher e-commerce penetration and consumer credit culture make it Africa’s testing lab for BNPL scale.

In Egypt

valU, Sympl, Shahry, Contact, MNT-Halan
→ Dominant in appliances, electronics, and medical services

Egypt’s BNPL model merges retail credit, lifestyle spending, and digital lending in ways unmatched elsewhere.

In Nigeria

CredPal, Carbon Pay Later, FairMoney BNPL, EasyBuy
→ Driven by smartphone financing and urban consumer demand

Nigeria’s young demographic and mobile-first behavior create explosive adoption.

East Africa

Lipa Later, M-KOPA, Aspira
→ Strong integration with telcos and Mastercard

East Africa’s secret advantage: mobile-money ubiquity, enabling repayment structures most markets can’t match.

Notably missing: Klarna, Afterpay, PayPal.
Africa’s BNPL space remains dominated by local players, leaving room for category-defining winners.

Everyone Should Be Paying Attention Now

1. Policymakers

BNPL’s expansion is outpacing the policy response, raising red flags:

  • over-indebtedness
  • hidden interest structures
  • weak credit reporting
  • data privacy gaps

Governments have a narrow window to create frameworks that balance innovation with consumer protection, and the earliest movers will shape the continent’s digital credit architecture.

2. Investors

Unlike many fintech categories, BNPL already has strong demand and favorable economics:

  • mobile-first distribution
  • lower underwriting costs
  • scalability improves margins
  • multiple revenue levers (merchant fees, interest, partnerships)

Also Read: PalmPay and Wema Bank Became the First Institutions to Run Live Transactions on Nigeria’s National Payment Stack

Africa’s projected 14.8% BNPL CAGR (2025–2030) rivals, or surpasses, global benchmarks.

3. VCs

BNPL checks every venture box:

  • massive TAM + low penetration
  • embedded finance potential
  • clear global precedent
  • partnership-driven scalability
  • uncluttered competitive landscape

With no pan-African leader, the field is wide open for a category-defining breakout.

The Next Phase

Through interviews, market data, and trend tracking, three future shifts appear inevitable:

1. Regulation Gets Teeth

South Africa, Egypt, and Nigeria are already moving.
Expect new rules around:

  • affordability assessments
  • transparency
  • reporting
  • consumer protection

If well-designed, regulation will stabilize, not suppress, Buy Now, Pay Later growth.

2. Consolidation Begins

Stronger players will absorb weaker ones.
Expect:

  • mergers
  • acquisitions
  • bank partnerships
  • telco-lender hybrids

Buy Now, Pay Later will not stay fragmented.

3. Buy Now, Pay Later Moves Into High-Value, High-Impact Sectors

The next frontier spans:

  • healthcare
  • education
  • rent
  • mobility
  • agriculture
  • SMEs

BNPL becomes a backbone for critical life and business expenses, not just retail convenience.

Africa’s Buy Now, Pay Later Surge Is More Than a Trend, It’s a Structural Credit Shift

The evidence is clear: Buy Now, Pay Later is not a fintech fad or a temporary workaround.

It is reshaping:

  • how Africans borrow
  • how they shop
  • how businesses sell
  • how digital credit is delivered
  • how consumers manage liquidity

Policymakers must guide it.
Investors should lean in.
VCs have a rare window to back market-defining winners.

Because one fact is becoming undeniable:
BNPL is the engine powering Africa’s next credit revolution — and the time to act is now.

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