The Fragmentation Problem That Holds African Fintech Back
Africa’s fintech industry is in its second growth wave. Having proven the payments use case — mobile money, remittances, card-acquiring — a new generation of fintechs is now tackling digital lending, insurance, and wealth management. BCG research projects the continent’s fintech revenue growing from $10 billion to $65 billion by 2030, with B2B credit and embedded finance driving the next cycle.
But there is a structural barrier that the first fintech wave papered over with venture capital: regulatory fragmentation. Africa has 54 countries, 54 central banks, and 54 distinct fintech licensing regimes. A fintech licensed in Nigeria cannot operate in Ghana without a separate licence. A Rwandan wallet cannot process payments for Congolese buyers without a new regulatory approval. The “modular approach of going country by country is becoming too slow,” noted an executive at the 2026 Africa fintech forum, as quoted by Techpoint.africa.
The cost of this fragmentation is measurable. Flutterwave, which operates across 30+ African markets, has built an entire compliance and licensing team — estimated in industry analyses at tens of millions of dollars annually — simply to maintain its multi-country licence stack. For a Series A fintech that needs to expand from its home market into a neighbouring country, that same licensing process can take 12–24 months and several hundred thousand dollars in legal fees before a single transaction is processed.
The Ghana–Rwanda passporting pilot is the first bilateral attempt to break this pattern.
What the Ghana–Rwanda Passporting Pilot Actually Is
The agreement is described as “license passporting being trialled between the Central Bank of Ghana and the National Bank of Rwanda,” according to CNBC Africa’s coverage of the 2026 International Finance Forum. It is framed as a pilot — a testing phase — rather than a fully implemented framework. The core mechanism: a fintech company that holds a valid licence from one signatory central bank can operate in the other signatory market under a streamlined recognition process rather than a full re-licensing application.
This is meaningful even in its current form. A Ghanaian mobile wallet operator that wants to serve Rwandan users, or a Rwandan digital lender that wants to expand into Ghana, would navigate a mutual recognition pathway rather than repeating the full regulatory application from scratch. The specific categories of licences covered, the supervisory responsibility split, and the capital adequacy translation rules between the two systems are not yet publicly detailed — the pilot phase is presumably where those mechanics are being stress-tested.
What Pan African Visions describes as Africa’s “second fintech wave” is characterized precisely by companies hitting the wall of cross-border fragmentation. The Ghana–Rwanda model, if it works, provides a template.
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What This Means for the African Fintech Ecosystem
The passporting model does not exist in isolation. It sits alongside other continental harmonization efforts — PAPSS (the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System), the African Continental Free Trade Area’s digital trade protocol negotiations, and the work of the Smart Africa Alliance on regulatory convergence — that collectively form the infrastructure layer under the continent’s fintech ambitions.
1. The Template Value Is More Important Than the Volume
Ghana and Rwanda are not the two largest fintech markets on the continent — Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa dominate by transaction volume. The importance of the Ghana–Rwanda pilot is its replicability. A bilateral agreement between two mid-size markets that demonstrates mutual licence recognition can be copied — first as bilaterals between other pairs of markets, and eventually as a multilateral framework negotiated through the African Union or the African Development Bank’s financial sector programmes.
Singapore’s fintech passporting framework with Australia (the Australia-Singapore Fintech Bridge, established 2016) followed exactly this trajectory: a bilateral pilot that demonstrated regulatory equivalence could be assessed and communicated formally, which then informed Singapore’s broader network of 40+ fintech cooperation agreements globally. Africa’s version would start from a much more complex base — 54 sovereigns rather than 2 — but the Ghana–Rwanda pilot establishes that African central banks are willing to cede some of the licensing sovereignty that fragmentation implies.
2. Fintechs Should Watch the Pilot’s Capital Adequacy Mechanics
The hardest part of any passporting framework is not mutual recognition of the licence itself — it’s agreeing on what capital adequacy, consumer protection, and AML/KYC standards are equivalent between two systems. Ghana’s Bank of Ghana and Rwanda’s National Bank of Rwanda operate under different Basel tier adoption schedules and different consumer protection frameworks. How the pilot resolves these differences — whether through regulatory equivalence assessments, joint supervisory colleges, or deference to the home regulator — will determine whether the model is truly scalable or just a diplomatic gesture.
Fintechs evaluating cross-border expansion strategies should track the pilot’s mechanics as they emerge. The capital adequacy translation question matters most: if a Ghana-licensed fintech must hold Rwandan capital reserves equivalent to what a domestically licensed Rwandan fintech would hold, the cost savings versus full re-licensing may be modest. If the home regulator’s capital adequacy assessment is mutually recognized, the savings are substantial.
3. Build for Passporting Readiness Before the Framework Arrives
For fintechs operating in either Ghana or Rwanda — or preparing to launch in either market — the strategic move is to build compliance infrastructure that would survive the review criteria likely to emerge from the passporting process. This means: full AML/KYC documentation aligned with FATF standards, audited financial statements for the last two years, documented consumer protection policies, and a data localization position that is coherent with both countries’ data protection frameworks.
Fintechs that build to this standard now will be first-movers when the mutual recognition pathway opens. Those that built lighter compliance programmes for their home market will face an upgrade cost before they can use the passporting lane.
The Structural Lesson
Fintech passporting in Africa will not happen through a single continental agreement — the regulatory sovereignty differences between African states are too large for that approach in the near term. The Ghana–Rwanda bilateral model represents a more realistic path: a network of bilateral and sub-regional agreements that gradually create de facto equivalence zones, starting with the countries whose regulatory frameworks are closest in structure and philosophy.
The $65 billion fintech revenue opportunity BCG identifies for 2030 depends on African fintechs being able to operate at regional scale, not just national scale. Every bilateral passporting agreement that succeeds makes the next one faster to negotiate and the continent’s fintech infrastructure one step more unified.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is fintech passporting and how does the Ghana–Rwanda agreement work?
Fintech passporting allows a company licensed by one country’s central bank to operate in another country under a mutual recognition arrangement, rather than applying for a full separate licence. The Ghana–Rwanda pilot, being trialled between the Central Bank of Ghana and the National Bank of Rwanda, is Africa’s first bilateral attempt at this model. Specific mechanics — capital adequacy equivalence, supervisory responsibility split — are still being worked out in the pilot phase.
How does the Africa fintech passporting model compare to Singapore’s approach?
Singapore built a network of 40+ fintech cooperation agreements globally, starting with the Australia-Singapore Fintech Bridge in 2016. The model demonstrated that two regulators could formally assess each other’s frameworks as equivalent and communicate that in writing — enabling streamlined market access. Africa’s version faces greater complexity (54 sovereigns vs. 2 in a bilateral), but the Ghana–Rwanda pilot follows the same logic: start bilateral, prove the template, then scale through additional agreements.
When will African fintech passporting be available more broadly?
The Ghana–Rwanda agreement is in pilot phase as of 2026. If the pilot succeeds, similar bilateral agreements between other African pairs of markets could emerge within 2–3 years. A multilateral continental framework negotiated through the African Union would take longer — potentially 5–7 years. Fintechs planning 2026–2028 expansion strategies should plan around country-by-country licensing remaining the norm, while building compliance infrastructure that would qualify them for passporting lanes when they open.




