Globally, digital banking is experiencing significant growth, with over 3.9 billion users projected for 2025. In Nigeria, 82% of banking customers aged 18–34 now rely on mobile banking. As of 2024, around 60% of Nigerians participated in digital payments, and the value of electronic transactions reached a record ₦1.08 quadrillion. Rising investor interest in fintech underscores the sector’s vast potential, with new startups vying daily for a share of this expanding market.
Digital banks are financial institutions that operate entirely online, offering services through websites or mobile apps instead of traditional branch-based operations. Others open a few physical locations to build public trust and reach underserved populations. These institutions primarily rely on technology to simplify banking. This ranking draws on funding, app performance, and market influence.
According to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), as of February 2023, 894 companies had been licensed as microfinance banks. By May, 179 licenses had been revoked, including that of Eyowo, which was later reinstated upon approval in principle. Currently, 874 microfinance banks remain operational, though not all are fully digital. The top fully digital banks licensed in Nigeria are Sofri, Mint, PiggyVest, VFD, Moniepoint, FairMoney, Carbon, Kuda, Eyowo, and Sparkle.
Top digital banks in Nigeria
1. Moniepoint
Headquarters: Lagos, Nigeria
Founded: 2015
Key features: SME banking, instant transfers, POS network, personal digital accounts
Moniepoint is Nigeria’s first digital banking unicorn, processing over 800 million monthly transactions worth billions of dollars. Its dual focus on SMEs and personal banking, backed by a $110 million funding round, positions it as the country’s most robust digital financial ecosystem.
2. Kuda
Headquarters: Lagos, Nigeria
Founded: 2019
Key features: Zero-fee transfers, budget tracking, instant virtual cards
Kuda pioneered true app-first banking in Nigeria, attracting millions of young users with its clean interface and transparent pricing. In 2025, its transaction volume exceeded ₦14 trillion, reflecting deep customer trust and strong digital engagement.
3. PalmPay
Headquarters: Lagos, Nigeria
Founded: 2019
Key features: Reward-based payments, flexible bill payments, merchant tools
With over 35 million users and one million SMEs on its platform, PalmPay blends gamified payments with solid infrastructure. Its rapid adoption and growing merchant network make it one of West Africa’s fastest-rising fintechs.
4. OPay
Headquarters: Lagos, Nigeria
Founded: 2018
Key features: Mobile wallet, bill payments, debit cards, microloans
Backed by Chinese investors and a vast agent network, OPay dominates Nigeria’s mobile payments scene. Its accessibility and intuitive app make it a popular choice for millions of unbanked and underbanked Nigerians.
5. ALAT by Wema Bank
Headquarters: Lagos, Nigeria
Founded: 2017
Key features: Seamless account opening, virtual cards, goal-based savings
ALAT introduced Nigerians to fully digital banking. As Wema Bank’s innovation arm, it blends legacy trust with modern convenience, earning multiple awards for customer experience and digital innovation.
6. FairMoney
Headquarters: Lagos, Nigeria
Founded: 2017
Key features: Instant microloans, bill payments, savings wallets
Originally a mobile loan app, FairMoney has evolved into a licensed microfinance bank. Its speed, accessibility, and reliable customer service make it one of Nigeria’s top fintech lenders.
7. Carbon
Headquarters: Lagos, Nigeria
Founded: 2012
Key features: Instant loans, payments, investment options
As one of Nigeria’s earliest digital lenders, Carbon combines financial discipline with user-friendly technology. Its all-in-one app and efficient credit system make it a preferred choice for salary earners and small business owners.
Trends in Nigeria’s digital banking
Nigeria’s digital banking ecosystem is not merely competing with legacy institutions; it is expanding financial access and inclusion. Funding and scale remain key differentiators. Moniepoint’s unicorn status and Kuda’s transaction volumes highlight how capital efficiency and trust-driven adoption determine success. Meanwhile, consumer-facing apps like PalmPay and OPay thrive on mass-market penetration and gamified engagement, showing that scale is as much about usability as it is about funding.
Another notable trend is the fusion of fintech agility with traditional banking trust. ALAT demonstrates how legacy institutions can reinvent themselves through technology, while Carbon and FairMoney show how lending-focused fintechs can evolve into full-service digital banks.
Collectively, these digital banks are driving Nigeria toward a cash-light economy, with mobile-led transactions shaping habits across urban and rural communities alike. As competition intensifies, the next phase will hinge on AI-driven personalisation, credit innovation, and regional expansion, positioning Nigeria’s fintech leaders to compete not just locally but across Africa’s $200-billion digital finance frontier.
However, the planned personal income tax (PIT)and recent regulations may impact fintech growth and operational dynamics in 2025.