South Africa has become one of Africa’s most dynamic fintech ecosystems, accounting for nearly 21% of all fintech startups across the continent in 2023, second only to Nigeria with a 32 % share, according to Disrupt Africa’s Finnovating for Africa 2023 report.
Among these are several of Africa’s biggest and most valuable fintech ventures, underscoring the country’s pivotal role in the continent’s digital finance transformation.
Today, we look at some of South Africa’s most successful and fastest-growing fintech startups in 2026, highlighting their value propositions, recent achievements, and what they have in store for the coming year and beyond. These category leaders have recorded substantial growth and garnered investor attention, positioning them for continued momentum from 2026 onwards.
Top Fintech Startups in South Africa
TymeBank

Launched in 2019, TymeBank is a prominent fintech startup in South Africa and one of the world’s fastest-growing digital banks. It blends a fully digital experience with a physical presence of more than 1,000 kiosks situated inside retail chains such as Boxer, Pick n Pay and TFG stores, focusing on make banking accessible to all South Africans across the economic spectrum.
TymeBank’s product suite is built around simplicity and affordability. Customers can open a zero‑fee account, use the MoreTyme feature to purchase goods and repay them in three interest‑free installments, and send money to any South African mobile number, even to people who do not hold a bank account. Savings are encouraged through GoalSave, which offers attractive interest rates and lets users create up to ten separate savings goals. In addition, the app supports bill payments for utilities, credit cards, municipalities, schools and other service providers, requiring only the account number as a reference.
TymeBank has been widely successful since its launch. It its early years, the company onboarded roughly 150,000 new customers each month, and by October 2023, it ranked as the fourth‑largest bank in South Africa by customer count. Profitability was achieved in December 2023, less than five years after launch, and the customer base now exceeds 11 million.
Last year, TymeBank continued to appear on the Financial Times (FT) Africa’s Fastest-Growing Companies 2025 list, ranking 29th regionally. Between 2020 and 2023, the bank’s revenue rose from US $10.67 million to US $67.70 million, marking a staggering 610.9% increase during the period.
TymeBank is part of digital banking group, the Tyme Group, which also operates GoTyme Bank in the Philippines and provides merchant cash advance solutions in Indonesia. Across the group, more than 17 million customers and 150,000 small and medium‑sized enterprises (SMEs) are served.
The Tyme Group closed a US$250 million Series D funding round led by Nubank in December 2024, raising the company’s valuation to US $1.5 billion. In June 2025, the group launched a merchant lending platform in Indonesia and announced plans to open a retail bank there. A money lender’s license was obtained in Hong Kong, with a new partnership for merchant lending slated for announcement shortly.
Yoco

Founded in 2015 and based in Cape Town, Yoco is an all-in-one digital commerce platform for SMEs. The company provides payment and financial solutions to merchants, including card machines, online payments, point‑of‑sale (POS) systems, business funding options, and integrated business management.
Yoco’s flagship offering, Yoco Counter, is a unified POS and payment terminal. It combines a 12‑inch HD touchscreen, integrated Neo Touch payment processing, optional printer connectivity and feature‑rich POS software. The company claims that merchants who migrate to Yoco Counter are seeing dramatic improvements, including a 500% increase in sales and a near 300% boost in staff tips, thanks to faster checkout, reduced errors and consolidated reporting.
In 2025, Yoco made several software enhancements. Saved orders and split payments were introduced on Khumo and Khumo Print, allowing staff to handle multiple customers smoothly. Location‑based tracking was also added, enabling owners to monitor inventory and sales across multiple sites, while Accelerate, another addition, provides a flexible payout service with lower transaction fees designed for expanding businesses.
As of early 2026, Yoco claimed more than 202,000 customers, and processed over US$2 billion in annual transaction volume.
The company’s rapid growth and innovation have earned it several accolades, including placement on CNBC’s Top 250 Fintech Companies in 2024, and inclusion in the FT’s Africa Fastest‑Growing Companies list in 2022.
Looking ahead to 2026, Yoco says it will remain focused on simplifying sales, easing management and accelerating growth for its merchant community.
Onafriq

Founded in 2009 and headquartered in Johannesburg, Onafriq, formerly known as MFS Africa, is a pan-African payment company which enables interoperable cross-border and domestic digital payments.
The company’s infrastructure spans 43 African markets and connects over 1 billion mobile money wallets, 500 million bank accounts, and over 400,000 agents, offering a single integration point for partners to reach customers across Africa without building separate connections to each mobile money or banking system, and supporting use cases ranging from peer‑to‑peer (P2P) transfers and merchant collections to card issuance, agency banking and foreign exchange (FX) services.
In 2023, Onafriq was recognized as Fintech of the Year at the African Banker Awards, underscoring its impact on the continent’s financial ecosystem.
Looking ahead, the company says it will continue to develop its network and ensure local relevance, while maintaining the scale of its pan-African infrastructure. Onafriq is also exploring blockchain infrastructure and stablecoin integrations to facilitate near-instant, programmable payments.
Pineapple

Founded in 2017 and based in Johannesburg, Pineapple is an insurance provider known for its innovative insurance solutions, affordable premiums and omnichannel approach. The company’s mobile‑first platform lets users obtain a quote, purchase a policy and file claims entirely through the Pineapple app or via its website.
A distinctive feature is the “snap” quoting process. Users simply need to photograph the item that would like to insure, such as their car, answer a few brief questions and receive a quote within 90 seconds, with the option to finalize the policy in under five minutes. Round‑the‑clock support is also provided for customers who prefer other channels. Underwriting is performed by Old Mutual Alternative Risk Transfer (OMART), a specialized division of Old Mutual Limited.
Pineapple’s growth has been fueled by significant venture funding, including a US$22 million Series B closed in November 2023 that brought its total funding to over US$29 million. In 2024, the company achieved a triple-digit growth, experiencing 178% active premium growth and a 209% increase in staff headcount, BusinessTech reported. The momentum sustained in 2025, with 89% active premium growth and a 48% increase in headcount.
Now, Pineapple is focusing on expanding market share within South Africa while refining its AI‑powered underwriting and user‑experience capabilities. It aims to capture a larger portion of the uninsured and under‑insured population, a segment that remains sizable in the country.
VALR

Founded in 2018 and headquartered in Johannesburg, VALR is a cryptocurrency exchange that allows professional and retail traders to buy, sell, store, stake and transact over 100 cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana.
VALR’s product suite include spot trading, spot margin, perpetual futures, staking, lending, borrowing, over‑the‑counter services, the VALR Invest feature, and VALR Pay. Users can convert fiat currencies, including the South African Rand, into crypto via a simple buy/sell swap terminal, bank transfers or at over 31,000 retail stores and 700,000 locations across the country through integrations with Zapper, Scan‑to‑Pay and Peach Payments. The platform also provides an institutional‑grade API with real‑time and historical market data, shared‑account governance and high rate limits.
Licensed by South Africa’s Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA), with regulatory approval in Europe, VALR serves over 1.6 million users and 1,800 corporate and institutional clients worldwide.
In 2025, VALR introduced a number of new products and features. These include Crypto Bundles, which makes it easier for beginners in crypto to build a diversified crypto investment portfolio, and xStocks, which gives users price exposure to US stocks and index funds.
Institutionally, VALR partnered with several leading African financial entities. With Mukuru, for example, VALR is improving US dollar stablecoin access in Africa. It’s also working with several of South Africa’s most prominent banks to build crypto‑asset services for their customers.
Stitch

Founded in 2019 and headquartered in Cape Town, Stitch is a payment infrastructure company. The firm provides enterprise‑grade solutions that enable businesses to accept, send and manage both online and in‑person payments, streamline financial operations and improve customer conversion.
Stitch provides an end‑to‑end payment gateway that supports both digital checkout experiences and physical POS transactions. This allows businesses to manage all customer payments, whether made on a website, in an app, or in a store, through a single, unified system.
Stitch also offers tools for recurring payments, enabling businesses to automate subscription charges or regular collections, fast and reliable payouts, as well as automated fraud prevention. The company also provides a payment orchestration API that lets enterprises manage pay‑ins, payouts, and reconciliation across multiple payment methods and providers.
Key milestones in 2025 included the acquisition of ExiPay, which added support for unified commerce experiences and omnichannel payments for enterprise clients, and the refresh of the Stitch Express e-commerce solution. In April, the company raised a US$55 million Series B to continue building deep payments infrastructure for enterprise businesses and to accelerate expansion into key areas identified by its clients as pain points.
Later in the year, Stitch acquired Efficacy Payments, a Designated Clearing System Participant (DCSP) by the SARB, allowing it to issue cards and process transactions directly.
In 2026, Stitch plans to launch additional acquiring products, strengthen its in‑person payments infrastructure, expand e‑commerce tooling and reinforce its brand.
Jumo

Founded in 2015 and based in Cape Town, Jumo is a banking-as-a-service (BaaS) platform that uses artificial intelligence (AI) to power next-generation financial services in emerging markets. The platform consists of modular, fully configurable services covering payment management, data storage, transaction processing, customer onboarding, loan‑and‑savings administration, treasury, risk scoring, portfolio strategy and related functions. This plug‑and‑play stack allows partners to launch new financial products quickly, at low cost and with high governance standards.
Since its inception, Jumo’s technology has facilitated more than US$8.7 billion in lending across Africa, reaching roughly 35 million people in Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Uganda, Côte d’Ivoire, South Africa, Benin and Cameroon. The company claims that over 200 million individual loans have been disbursed, serving more than 25 million end users, and that around 80% of Africa’s leading banks and payments firms work with its platform.
Key partnerships in 2025 included a collaboration with Orange Money to launch a micro‑loan service for users across Africa, and a joint effort with Mukuru to introduce Fast Loan, a mobile‑first credit solution aimed at filling a gap in South Africa’s financial ecosystem.
Ozow

Formerly known as i-Pay, Ozow is a leading full-service payment provider for South African businesses, offering solutions for both incoming and outgoing payments. Founded in 2014 and headquartered in Cape Town, the company offers a platform that supports a range of transaction types, including Pay by Bank, card payments, cash vouchers, PayShap requests, real‑time payouts, and refunds, allowing merchants to accept payments, issue refunds, and make payouts quickly and securely. In addition to traditional payment methods, it also provides e‑commerce integrations, e‑billing, and payment links, creating a unified experience for both online and physical retail environments.
Ozow serves thousands of merchants across South Africa, and boasts more than 6 million registered users. In February 2026, it expanded its offering by integrating cryptocurrency as a primary payment solution on its platform, allowing merchants to accept crypto as a payment method.
Partnered with MoneyBadger, a South African Bitcoin‑centric payments technology provider—the new service lets customers pay directly from crypto wallets, including Bitcoin Lightning and major exchange wallets such as Luno, VALR, and Binance. Payments made in cryptocurrency settle instantly in South African Rand, giving merchants a single integration point for all major payment methods in the region.
Featured image: Edited by Fintech News Singapore, based on image by Tobias Reich via Unsplash








