Remittance apps are quietly replacing traditional banks for Africans abroad, and the shift is being driven by one thing: frustration.
For millions of Africans living in Europe and the UK, sending money home is no longer just about transfers. It is about speed, trust, transparency, and survival. Families across Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana depend on diaspora inflows for rent, school fees, medical bills, groceries, and emergencies, yet traditional transfer systems still remain expensive, slow, and vulnerable to fraud.
That growing frustration is now creating an opening for fintech companies like Profee, which are redesigning how Africans abroad move money home.
A recent customer study conducted by Profee involving more than 200 users sending money from Europe and the UK to Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana reveals just how deeply embedded remittances have become in African family structures and why users are increasingly abandoning legacy banking systems for digital platforms.
For many African migrants, sending money home is not viewed as optional support. It is viewed as responsibility.
“African expats consider sending money home a cultural norm. Even when far away, Africans feel strongly connected to their families, stay in touch with them and send money regularly. There is an unofficial term even, the ‘Black tax’, which 40% of Profee clients use to describe the regular financial support they provide to their families back in Africa.” — Ilya Bunin, CMO at Profee
Why traditional remittance systems are losing trust
The African remittance market remains one of the most expensive in the world despite years of financial innovation. According to World Bank data referenced by Profee, the average cost of sending $200 to Sub-Saharan Africa stood at 8.46% in Q3 2025. By comparison, similar transfers to South Asia averaged just 5.30%. Cash-based remittances are even more expensive, often crossing 10%.
Beyond cost, speed remains another major pain point. Traditional wire transfers can take several days because of multiple banking intermediaries, settlement delays, compliance bottlenecks, and cross-border processing systems.
For families relying on money for urgent bills or emergencies, those delays can have serious consequences. Security concerns are also growing. Africa’s fast-growing digital economy has simultaneously become a major target for fraudsters, fake investment schemes, phishing attacks, and payment scams. That has made trust one of the biggest deciding factors for Africans choosing remittance platforms.
Increasingly, users are prioritising platforms that can combine:
Fast transfers
Transparent exchange rates
Reliable customer support
Fraud protection
Easy payout systems
Mobile accessibility
This is where fintech companies believe they have an advantage over traditional financial institutions.
The rise of fintech first remittances
Unlike older remittance systems designed around banking infrastructure, newer fintech platforms are being built around user behaviour. For African migrants sending money home repeatedly, convenience matters almost as much as pricing.
Profee says its platform focuses heavily on simplifying repeat transfers through saved recipients, fast onboarding, transparent pricing, and mobile first design.
The company also claims customers can see the exact amount recipients will receive before transactions are completed, addressing one of the biggest frustrations users have with hidden conversion fees and fluctuating exchange rates.
In many traditional remittance systems, “zero fee” marketing often masks poor exchange rates or hidden deductions further along the transaction process.
Fintech companies are attempting to compete by making pricing more visible upfront.
Why payout flexibility matters in Africa
One major reason fintech remittance apps are gaining traction in African markets is payout flexibility. Not every recipient is digitally savvy. Not every family member uses crypto. Not everyone has access to sophisticated financial products.
In countries like Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana, direct bank transfers still remain one of the most trusted payout methods for families receiving money from abroad.
At the same time, mobile money adoption continues to grow rapidly across parts of Africa particularly in East Africa.
Profee currently supports:
MTN
AirtelTigo
Vodafone Cash
Telecel in Ghana
Airtel Kenya
Safaricom
M Pesa
That mix of traditional banking and mobile money infrastructure is becoming increasingly important as African payment habits evolve differently across regions.
Security is becoming the real product
As remittance competition intensifies, fintech companies are no longer competing only on speed and fees. Increasingly, they are competing on trust.
Profee says it employs:
End to end encryption
Two factor authentication
Face ID verification
Real time fraud monitoring
Customer support systems
The emphasis on security reflects a broader trend across African fintech where fraud prevention is becoming central to product design rather than an afterthought.
For many African users abroad, one failed transfer or scam experience can permanently destroy trust in a provider. That means fintech companies operating in the remittance space are effectively selling reliability as much as they are selling payments. The bigger remittance shift happening in Africa
Africa’s remittance economy is massive and still growing. According to World Bank estimates, remittance inflows into Sub-Saharan Africa crossed tens of billions of dollars annually in recent years, often outperforming foreign direct investment in several economies.
Nigeria remains one of Africa’s largest remittance destinations while Kenya and Ghana continue seeing strong diaspora inflows. But beneath the numbers, a bigger structural shift is happening.
Diaspora users are becoming less loyal to traditional banks and increasingly loyal to platforms that reduce friction.
That shift is pushing fintech companies into a powerful position:
They control the transfer journey
They reduce settlement delays
They simplify currency conversion
They build trust directly with users
For African migrants sending money home every month, the winning platform is no longer necessarily the oldest financial institution.
It is simply the one that works fastest, costs less, and feels safest.
They own the customer experience.
