Nigeria & West Africa Tech — 2026-06-15
African startups raised $135 million in May 2026, with Nigeria continuing to dominate the continent's tech ecosystem. MTN Group Fintech is launching a super app powered by Ant International in Q3 2026, while Flutterwave secured a critical microlender license from Nigeria's central bank, expanding direct banking capabilities across the region.
Nigeria & West Africa Tech — 2026-06-15
Key Highlights
African Startup Funding Holds Steady at $135M
In May 2026, 37 African startups announced $135 million in funding through transactions exceeding $100,000, including equity, debt, and grants.

Flutterwave Secures Microlender License
In April 2026, Flutterwave received a national microlender license from Nigeria's Central Bank, marking a major regulatory milestone. The license allows the pan-African fintech to offer bank accounts, hold customer deposits, and extend credit directly to Nigerian customers—services previously provided through partner banks. This move strengthens Flutterwave's competitive position in Africa's largest fintech market.
MTN Group Fintech Launches Super App Strategy
MTN Group Fintech is transforming its MoMo platform into a super app through a partnership with Ant International, with launch in Nigeria targeted for Q3 2026. The initiative aims to boost digital inclusion by leveraging mini-app technology and enhanced features across the MoMo ecosystem, positioning MTN to capture more transaction volume in West Africa's mobile money market.

Analysis
The Regulatory Acceleration Moment
Flutterwave's microlender license signals a turning point for Nigerian fintech. By moving from partnership models to direct regulation, major fintechs can now compete head-to-head with banks on core products—deposits, lending, account management. This regulatory evolution removes friction and positions Lagos-based companies as true financial infrastructure providers, not just payment processors. MTN's super app strategy parallels this shift, aiming to move beyond transactions into an ecosystem play that captures more user value and spending time.
The convergence of these moves suggests West African regulators are maturing their approach: embracing fintech innovation while establishing direct oversight rather than requiring third-party banking partnerships.
What to Watch
Cross-Border Integration
The launch of the first wallet-based outbound payments corridor between Nigeria and Ghana in early 2026 through Onafriq and the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) marks progress toward faster, low-cost regional remittances. Watch how this scales across West Africa's top economies.
Transaction Tax Headwinds
Cameroon, Mali, and Senegal have introduced transaction taxes on mobile money that are pushing users back to cash, echoing Ghana's e-levy experience. Monitor whether Nigeria avoids similar policy mistakes and whether these taxes force fintech innovation toward higher-margin services like lending and insurance.
Data Freshness Note: This report covers developments published between June 8–15, 2026. Older sources on Nigerian fintech ecosystem rankings (May 2026 and earlier) were excluded per editorial standards.
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