Africaโs payments landscape has long been described with two words that donโt usually go together: enormous opportunity, impossible complexity. Every country runs differently. Payment rails, regulatory environments, and consumer habits fragment the continent into dozens of distinct micro-markets, each demanding its own integration, its own compliance stack, its own operational overhead. For global businesses that want in, the cost of that complexity has historically been a quiet dealbreaker.
Yuno and Flutterwave are now betting one API call can change that calculus.
The two companies announced a strategic partnership on April 28, 2026, designed to streamline payments for businesses expanding into Africa. Through a single API integration, Yuno merchants can now activate Flutterwaveโs local payment methods including cards, mobile money, and bank transfers across key African markets instantly, eliminating the complexity and cost of multiple local integrations.
The mechanics are straightforward, even if the problem theyโre solving is not. By combining Yunoโs unified global payments platform with Flutterwaveโs extensive on-the-ground presence and regulatory reach, merchants gain seamless access to payments in Nigeria, Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia, Rwanda, South Africa, and more all managed via a centralized Yuno dashboard that simplifies operations and reconciliation.
Yunoโs value proposition has always been orchestration: the ability to sit above a fragmented global payments ecosystem and route transactions intelligently across providers, methods, and acquirers. The platform already connects over 1,000 payment methods and fraud tools globally, serving enterprise clients like McDonaldโs, Uber, and GoFundMe. Flutterwave, on the other hand, has spent years building the opposite deep, local, often invisible infrastructure that powers payments at street level across Africa. The company has an infrastructure reach in 34 African countries and has processed over one billion transactions worth more than $40 billion, serving global and African clients such as Uber, Air Peace, Bamboo, and PiggyVest.
The partnership is structurally a classic platform play. Yuno owns the merchant relationship; Flutterwave owns the market relationship. Together, they eliminate the gap that has kept so many international businesses from committing to Africa in the first place.
Flutterwave CEO Olugbenga โGBโ Agboola framed his companyโs contribution bluntly: โAfricaโs payment landscape is incredibly vibrant but historically fragmented. Weโve spent years doing the heavy lifting, integrating hundreds of local payment methods and securing licenses across the continent to build a single payment superhighway.โ By opening that highway to Yunoโs global merchant base, Flutterwave extends its own reach while making onboarding dramatically faster for international players.
For Yuno CEO Juan Pablo Ortega, the appeal is just as direct. โExpanding into Africa has been a complex and resource-intensive challenge for many global businesses. By partnering with Flutterwave, weโre giving our merchants a single, scalable solution to access Africaโs dynamic markets faster and with much less friction.
The partnership addresses two specific pain points that have historically deterred global expansion into the continent: resource constraints, where engineering and product teams are often stretched thin and forced to deprioritize Africa due to perceived complexity; and uncertainty around reliability, where businesses worry about uptime and success rates when they lack deep on-the-ground technical expertise.
The timing is deliberate. Africaโs digital economy is accelerating mobile money alone processes hundreds of billions of dollars annually across the continent, and smartphone adoption continues to climb. Yet for companies headquartered in New York, London, or Sรฃo Paulo, the activation energy required to actually serve African consumers has remained stubbornly high. This partnership is designed to lower that activation energy to near zero.
Merchants can start in one market and scale across the continent, backed by Flutterwaveโs regulatory licenses, massive reach, and local expertise with all African transactions monitored via the centralized Yuno dashboard, reducing operational overhead and making reconciliation seamless.
What makes this more than just a technical handshake is the signal it sends about how the industry is maturing. Africa-focused payment infrastructure is no longer being built solely for African businesses. The continentโs most capable payments companies are increasingly positioning themselves as the gateway layer for global commerce the default on-ramp for any international merchant that wants access to hundreds of millions of consumers without rebuilding from scratch. Flutterwave has clearly embraced that role, and Yuno, with its global merchant base, is the kind of partner that can actually move the needle on utilization.
For the broader ecosystem, itโs a reminder that the next phase of Africaโs fintech story may be less about building new rails and more about making the existing ones usable at scale, on demand, and for anyone in the world willing to show up.

