Axra Pay has introduced Church Givings Management, a dedicated platform designed to streamline how churches and ministries collect, track, and manage donations from members scattered across multiple countries.
The launch targets a longstanding pain point for faith-based organisations: enabling seamless giving from international congregants while maintaining unified financial oversight. Many churches struggle with fragmented tools for handling tithes, offerings, project-specific donations, and recurring support from members in cities such as London, Toronto, Nairobi, Johannesburg, and New York.
Axraโs new solution allows churches to manage all giving streams including tithes, offerings, seeds, building projects, and evangelism funds from a single dashboard. It includes donor management tools, engagement features, detailed reporting, and support for multiple branches or campuses.
Multi-Channel Payment Infrastructure
The platform supports a wide range of payment methods tailored to both African and global users:
- Card payments: Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, and Google Pay, accessible wherever these instruments are accepted.
- Local payments: Bank transfers and mobile money across more than 19 African countries, including Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania, Rwanda, Uganda, and Zambia. A single church registration provides access across these markets.
- Digital currencies: USDC and USDT stablecoins for instant transfers from anywhere in the world.
- Multi-currency support: USD, EUR, GBP, and over 20 African currencies, including the Nigerian naira.
This combination aims to reduce barriers for diaspora members who previously faced high fees, delays, or complicated bank processes when supporting their home churches.
Axra Pay, built on the infrastructure of GoPremium, positions itself as a developer-friendly payments provider with a focus on cross-border and emerging market needs. The company has emphasised stablecoin rails for faster, lower-cost international settlements, particularly relevant for Africaโs large remittance and philanthropic flows.
Churches across Africa and its diaspora have increasingly adopted digital tools for member engagement and financial management. However, many still rely on multiple platforms or manual processes, leading to administrative burdens and lost giving opportunities. Global church giving software providers have long existed, but few combine deep African local payment rails with stablecoin and international card options in one integrated system.
The timing aligns with broader digital transformation in Africaโs faith sector, where mobile money penetration is high and diaspora remittances play a significant economic role. For ministries with transnational congregations, unified visibility into funds across currencies and geographies could improve stewardship and planning.
Axra has invited churches to register at pay.useaxra.com, with promises of quick onboarding. The company indicated this launch forms part of a wider push to build tailored solutions for faith communities.
Whether the platform can capture meaningful market share will depend on ease of adoption, transaction costs, security compliance, and its ability to deliver reliable reporting for church governance. As more religious organisations seek modern infrastructure without losing their local character, solutions like Church Givings Management reflect the growing intersection of fintech and faith-based operations in Africa.


