PalmPay
On the strength of its participation in Nigeria’s payment infrastructure, including completing a live transaction on the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS) National Payment Stack, fintech mobile banking platform Palmpay said it has become part of everyday financial life for 35 million users.
This, according to the company’s Managing Director, Chika Nwosu, placed the platform within a broader network designed to enable interoperability between banks, fintechs, and other financial service providers.
Nwosu, who made these known in Lagos, over the weekend, stated that at this level, performance is less about product differentiation and more about system reliability, transaction success rates, uptime, and the ability to function consistently within a multi-provider ecosystem.
He also said the expansion of the company’s agent network reflects a wider industry approach to bridging the gap in Nigeria’s digital finance landscape.
Data from EFInA (Enhancing Financial Innovation & Access) continues to show that a significant portion of Nigerians remain financially excluded, particularly in rural and underserved areas.
The Palmpay MD noted that in this context, distribution becomes as critical as technology, pointing out that by enabling physical access points for deposits, withdrawals, onboarding, and transfers, the platform’s agent networks serve as interface between cash-based activity and digital financial systems.
He explained that this hybrid model and digital infrastructure supported by human intermediaries has become a defining feature of financial service delivery in Nigeria, not limited to any single provider.
Nwosu also pointed out that security, similarly, operates as a baseline expectation rather than a competitive advantage.
As digital transactions increase, he said platforms are required to implement layered safeguards including biometric authentication, transaction monitoring, and user-controlled protections.
The effectiveness of these measures, he stated, is typically evaluated not by their presence, but by outcomes including reduced fraud incidence, system integrity, and user trust over time.
“Beyond transactions and infrastructure, some platforms have also begun extending into financial literacy and capacity-building initiatives.
“Programmes targeting underserved groups, including women-led businesses and first-time digital users, reflect an understanding that access alone does not guarantee meaningful participation in financial systems,” Nwosu added.
Taken together, he said these elements point to a broader shift in how digital financial services operate in Nigeria.
“Growth is no longer defined solely by user acquisition, but by the extent to which a platform becomes embedded in the routines through which individuals and businesses manage money.
“In that context, PalmPay’s reported scale offers a useful case study, not as an endpoint, but as part of an ongoing expansion within Nigeria’s financial system,” Nwosu emphasised.
PalmPay entered Nigeria’s financial services market as a consumer payments application in 2019, competing within an ecosystem already shaped by banks, fintech startups, and a largely cash-driven economy.
Six years on, Nwosu said the platform has reported over 35 million users. While scale is often presented as a measure of success, the PalmPay boss said in Nigeria’s digital finance ‘landscape, it took the platform’s integration into existing financial infrastructure to move beyond acquisition into sustained, everyday usage.
