Wave Mobile

Wave Mobile

Mobile money platform with free basics

About Wave Mobile

Simplify's Rating
Why Wave Mobile is rated
C
Rated C on Competitive Edge
Rated B on Growth Potential
Rated D+ on Differentiation

Industries

Fintech

Financial Services

Company Size

5,001-10,000

Company Stage

Debt Financing

Total Funding

$446.1M

Headquarters

Dakar, Senegal

Founded

2017

Overview

Wave is a digital finance platform in Africa that offers free basic mobile money services, including deposits, withdrawals, and bill payments, targeting underserved populations without traditional banking access. The product is a mobile app that users can load with funds and use for everyday transactions; services are free at the point of use, with revenue coming from partnerships and value-added services. Wave differentiates itself by removing transaction fees to build a large user base and by focusing on financial inclusion across rural and remote areas, leveraging its founders’ remittance background (Sendwave) to expand reach. The company aims to build life-changing financial infrastructure to lift people out of poverty and to replicate the growth and impact mobile money has had in places like Kenya, all while operating with a fully remote, transparent, and skill-based compensation model.

YC Company
Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • €117M debt from Rand Merchant Bank funds expansion across eight African markets.
  • Visa-Ecobank virtual card launched in Senegal after pilots boosts online payments.
  • TerraPay partnership enables remittances to 2.5M Mali wallets since May 2025.

What critics are saying

  • MTN and Orange undercut fees using telecom infrastructure across 35 countries.
  • WAEMU regulators mandate interoperability, destroying Wave's pricing power.
  • €117M debt covenants trigger contraction if growth stalls below 25% YoY.

What makes Wave Mobile unique

  • Wave charges 1% transfer fee with free deposits/withdrawals, undercutting telco competitors.
  • Founders Drew Durbin and Lincoln Quirk built Sendwave before launching Wave.
  • Full-stack platform enables instant, affordable services on feature phones via QR codes.

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Funding

Total Funding

$446.1M

Above

Industry Average

Funded Over

5 Rounds

Notable Investors:
Debt funding comparison data is currently unavailable. We're working to provide this information soon!
Debt Funding Comparison
Coming Soon

Benefits

Health Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Unlimited Paid Time Off

Paid Vacation

Parental Leave

Fertility Treatment Support

Remote Work Options

$10,000 annual charitable donation matching

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

0%

1 year growth

0%

2 year growth

0%
Boston Consulting Group
Mar 12th, 2026
Beyond Payments: Unlocking Africa's Second FinTech Wave

Beyond payments: unlocking Africa's second FinTech wave. From Transactional Inclusion to Scalable Financial Depth Africa's fintech momentum is real. Africa has emerged as the fastest-growing FinTech market globally. By 2030, revenues are projected to expand roughly 13x to approximately $65 billion (the highest growth multiple of any region). This expansion reflects structural change in how financial services are delivered and consumed across the continent. Figure 1: Projected FinTech revenue growth by region (2021-2030) Payments have been the clear engine of this growth. More than half of African FinTech firms operate in payments and lending, and over 60% of equity funding has flowed into these segments. Africa now accounts for roughly 74% of global mobile money transaction volume, reflecting both innovation and structural necessity. Figure 2: Distribution of African FinTech activity by product The first wave of African FinTech was defined by consumer-facing payment platforms that scaled rapidly across underserved markets. M-Pesa and MTN MoMo demonstrated the power of mobile wallets at national and regional scale, while fintech challengers such as Wave in West Africa, PalmPay and OPay in Nigeria, and Chipper across multiple markets expanded access by lowering costs and embedding digital payments into everyday transactions. Together, these platforms proved that consumer payments could scale at speed and reach mass adoption. Inclusion has expanded but adoption models diverge and Financial Depth remains limited. With 40% of adults in in Sub-Saharan Africa using mobile money, Africa now accounts for 74% of global mobile transaction volumes globally. Simplified onboarding, agent networks, and digital KYC have brought millions into the formal financial system for the first time. Figure 3: Mobile money usage by regions in Africa Weekly Insights Subscription Stay ahead with BCG insights on financial institutions. However, adoption has not followed a single path. The continent exhibits structurally different market models. In parts of East Africa, telco-led ecosystems achieved very high mobile money penetration, with multi-segment usage spanning C2C, merchant payments, and increasingly C2G transactions. In other markets, bank-led models have produced lower mobile money penetration and usage concentrated primarily in person-to-person transfers. Several markets remain at an early stage, with limited mobile banking integration and narrow use cases. These divergent models have created uneven levels of ecosystem maturity. Even in advanced mobile money markets such as Ghana, Kenya, and Uganda, formal credit penetration remains shallow, and a significant share of borrowing (>50%) continues through semi-formal or informal channels based on World Bank data. Africa has achieved transactional inclusion through distinct structural pathways. Yet across models, depth remains constrained. Figure 4: Mobile money market models across Africa This report series explores how Africa can navigate systemic complexity to unlock transformative opportunity across strategic topics including power, minerals, talent, AI, trade; grounded in data and local insight. The next phase requires moving beyond peer to peer (P2P) scale. Africa's first wave built robust domestic rails. The second must make those rails economically productive. Ubiquitous mobile money platforms, real-time switches such as the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System Instant Payment (NIP) and Kenya's PESALink Instant Payment Service, and dense agent networks have enabled strong P2P adoption across multiple markets. These foundations are meaningful and durable; the task now is to make them productive - extending beyond consumer payments to B2B and public-sector flows, and building credit markets anchored in risk-based lending. Incremental P2P growth alone will not materially shift productivity or credit access. The next stage requires deeper digitization of B2B flows, broader merchant integration, and embedding financial services directly into value chains. Domestic transaction scale must translate into business scale. Cross-border ambition is also rising. Initiatives such as PAPSS signal intent to support AfCFTA integration, yet high FX spreads, fragmented compliance regimes, and limited real-time interoperability continue to constrain seamless flows. Trade remains more costly and less fluid than infrastructure ambitions suggest. Monetization is likewise shifting beyond payments. Large transaction datasets, expanding digital ID programs, and emerging alternative lenders provide the raw material for scalable credit. However, weak credit bureaus, thin-file SMEs, and high capital costs continue to limit risk-based lending at scale. Figure 5: Three structural shifts shaping Africa's second FinTech wave: domestic deepening, cross-border integration, and expansion beyond payments Five institutional priorities to turn payment scale to Financial Depth. Africa's second FinTech wave will require deliberate institutional action to strengthen and align existing foundations: * First, digital public infrastructure must be fully interoperable. Wallet-bank-switch integration, universal digital ID, and standardized APIs should be treated as core economic infrastructure, not optional enhancements. Fragmentation raises cost-to-scale and limits competition. * Second, transaction data must become credit infrastructure. Secure data-sharing frameworks, AI-enabled underwriting, and emerging open banking reforms (e.g. in Nigeria and Kenya) can expand data portability and competition. Without stronger data rails, scalable SME lending and risk-based pricing will remain constrained. * Third, regulatory clarity must replace fragmentation. Proportional licensing, consistent KYC standards, and predictable supervision reduce uncertainty and lower risk for investors and operators alike. * Fourth, trust and resilience must scale with adoption. Consumer protection, fraud controls, and cybersecurity talent/capabilities are prerequisites for sustained ecosystem growth. * Finally, capital depth must expand beyond early-stage funding. Growth-stage and local-currency capital will determine whether FinTech ecosystems mature sustainably or stall prematurely. Figure 6: Five structural enablers required to translate transaction scale into financial depth Regulatory design ultimately shapes market outcomes. Global benchmarks make clear that scale follows regulatory design, demanding proactive, clear, and intentional action from regulators and governments. Brazil's PIX illustrates the power of infrastructure-led coordination. The Central Bank built and operates the instant payment system, mandated interoperability across banks and FinTechs, and ensured low-cost transfers. Adoption surpassed 140 million users within three years. India's UPI reflects a different but equally deliberate model. Public rails under RBI oversight combined with open API access enabled FinTechs and platforms to compete at the interface layer. Adoption now exceeds 300 million users and has catalyzed broad ecosystem expansion. Africa today reflects elements of each. Rwanda has advanced coordinated digital public infrastructure and a forward-looking regulatory posture. Kenya enabled market-led innovation first, with interoperability evolving subsequently. Nigeria has built strong domestic rails while refining FinTech regulatory clarity. Figure 7: Regulatory archetypes driving FinTech scale: Brazil's PIX, India's UPI, and Africa's emerging hybrid Across much of the continent, central banks increasingly shape core rails, while FinTechs dominate customer experience. The emerging model is hybrid. What remains unresolved is the long-term architecture for access, competition, and scale. The strategic questions now facing Africa's leaders. The next decade will be shaped less by start-up velocity and more by institutional choice. Africa has demonstrated its capacity to innovate and scale digital payments at speed. What remains uncertain is the long-term architecture that will govern access, competition, and integration across markets. The four questions that follow will determine whether Africa's financial ecosystem evolves toward coordinated scale or embeds fragmentation: Figure 8: Four strategic choices that will determine Africa's financial architecture Regulators and policymakers therefore hold the decisive levers. The opportunity is not simply to expand FinTech penetration, but to design a financial system capable of sustaining inclusive growth at scale. Africa has already built the rails. The strategic task now is to ensure those rails lead to depth. June 2, 2025 June 26, 2024 April 12, 2021 May 3, 2023 September 22, 2025 March 9, 2020

Pan African Visions
Jan 27th, 2026
Wave, Visa and Ecobank Launch Virtual Card to Expand Online Payments in Senegal

Wave, Visa and Ecobank launch virtual card to expand online payments in Senegal. Wave has launched a virtual payment card in Senegal in partnership with Visa and Ecobank Senegal, a move aimed at expanding access to online payments and accelerating financial inclusion in one of Africa's fastest-growing digital finance markets. The fully digital card, integrated directly into the Wave mobile application, allows users to make online payments on e-commerce platforms, subscription services, ticketing websites and digital content providers without the need for a traditional bank account or a physical debit card. The launch marks a significant step for Wave, the first unicorn in Francophone Africa, as it deepens its mobile money offering and connects millions of users to the global digital economy. Mobile money has become a dominant financial tool across Africa, particularly in West Africa, where it is widely used for peer-to-peer transfers and everyday transactions. However, access to online payments has remained limited for many users due to low banking penetration and the high cost of traditional cards. Wave's virtual card is designed to bridge that gap. Issued instantly and fully dematerialized, the card is secured by Visa's global payment network, allowing users to transact online with international merchants while maintaining the simplicity associated with mobile wallets. "This launch marks an important milestone in our mission to make financial services as simple and accessible as possible," said Malick Gueye, Managing Director of Wave Senegal. "With the virtual card integrated into the Wave app, our users can now pay online with the same ease as their everyday transactions. We are proud to reach this stage alongside Visa and Ecobank Senegal." Tested in Senegal and Côte d'Ivoire The launch follows several months of pilot testing in Senegal and Côte d'Ivoire, where Wave evaluated user demand and payment behavior. According to the company, feedback from the pilot phase confirmed strong interest in an affordable and transparent online payment solution. As digital consumption increases across Africa - driven by e-commerce, streaming services, online education and remote work - demand for secure online payment tools has grown sharply. Wave said the virtual card was developed to respond directly to that demand while minimizing friction for users already familiar with its mobile wallet. Ecobank supports commercialization The rollout is supported by Ecobank Senegal, a subsidiary of the Ecobank Group, Africa's largest pan-African banking institution, which is sponsoring Wave in the commercialization of the virtual card. "At Ecobank, we believe digital innovation is a key driver of financial inclusion and the evolution of payment habits in Africa," said Sahid Yallou, Managing Director of Ecobank Senegal. "By supporting Wave alongside partners such as Visa, we reaffirm our commitment to providing secure, accessible and inclusive payment solutions for individuals and businesses." Ecobank operates in 35 African countries and plays a growing role in supporting fintech partnerships as banks across the continent adapt to rapidly changing digital ecosystems. Visa strengthens digital payments footprint For Visa, the partnership strengthens its presence in Senegal's expanding digital payments market and aligns with its broader strategy of increasing financial access in emerging economies. "We are delighted to partner with Wave on the launch of Visa virtual cards in Senegal," said Sandra Gayibor, Country Manager for Visa Senegal. "Our ambition is to make digital payments more accessible, more secure and simpler for everyone. This initiative places a trusted Visa payment tool in the hands of millions of users and contributes to strengthening financial inclusion." Visa operates in more than 200 countries and territories and has increasingly partnered with mobile money providers across Africa to expand digital payment acceptance. The virtual card launch aligns with Wave's long-term ambition to help build a cashless and inclusive financial ecosystem across Africa. Since its founding, the company has focused on low-cost transactions and user-friendly design, enabling rapid adoption in multiple West African markets. As the first unicorn in Francophone Africa, Wave has emerged as a key player in the continent's fintech sector, competing with both banks and regional mobile money operators. By extending its services beyond transfers and merchant payments into online commerce, Wave is positioning itself at the center of Africa's evolving digital economy. Industry analysts say such partnerships between fintechs, global payment networks and banks are likely to accelerate as Africa's digital infrastructure matures. For millions of users, the impact is immediate: access to online services that were previously difficult or impossible to pay for. For the wider economy, the shift could help drive greater participation in digital trade and entrepreneurship. As mobile-first solutions continue to redefine financial services in Africa, Wave's virtual card represents another step in the continent's transition toward fully digital payments - one smartphone transaction at a time. Your trusted source for accurate and timely updates! Its commitment to accuracy, impartiality, and delivering breaking news as it happens has earned Pan African Visions the trust of a vast audience. Stay ahead with real-time updates on the latest events, trends.

IT News Africa
Jan 27th, 2026
Wave Senegal Introduces Virtual Card to Transform Digital Payments in Africa

Wave Senegal introduces virtual card to transform digital payments in Africa. Wave Mobile Money, in partnership with Visa and Ecobank Senegal, announces the official launch of the virtual payment card integrated into the Wave app for users in Senegal. Designed to meet a growing need among African users: access to modern, reliable, and transparent payment methods. The Wave Visa virtual card enables users to make online payments on major e-commerce platforms, subscription services, ticketing, streaming, and other digital services easily and with a high level of security. This launch is supported by Ecobank, a pan-African bank, which is supporting Wave in the commercialization of this virtual card and leveraging its expertise in digital financial services and secure payments. "At Ecobank, we firmly believe that digital innovation is a key driver for accelerating financial inclusion and supporting the evolution of payment habits in Africa. By sponsoring Wave in the rollout of this virtual card, and alongside leading players such as Visa, we reaffirm our role as a trusted partner to fintechs in Senegal and our commitment to offering secure, accessible payment solutions tailored to the needs of individuals and businesses. This partnership fully aligns with our pan-African banking strategy, which is focused on advancing digital financial services and promoting financial inclusion," commented Sahid Yallou, Managing Director of Ecobank Senegal. Following several months of a pilot phase conducted in Ivory Coast and Senegal, user feedback confirmed the relevance and strong potential of this solution to simplify everyday online payments. "For several months, we worked hand in hand with our users to refine this solution. Feedback has been extremely positive, confirming a real need for smoother and more accessible online payments. Today, we are proud to make it available to everyone," said Karamokho Badiane, Regional Director of Business Development and Partnerships at Wave Mobile Money. "This launch marks an important milestone in our mission: making financial services as simple and accessible as possible. With this virtual card integrated into the Wave app, our users will now be able to pay online with the same ease as they do their everyday transactions. We are proud to take this new step forward with Visa and Ecobank Senegal," said Malick Gueye, General Manager of Wave Senegal. The Wave Visa virtual card also stands out for its user-centric experience: instant issuance, ease of use, and direct integration into the app. It further strengthens Wave's commitment to providing useful, accessible, and inclusive financial services that meet users' real needs. "We are delighted to partner with Wave for the launch of Visa virtual cards in Senegal. At Visa, our ambition is to make digital payments more accessible, safer, and simpler for everyone. Through this initiative, we are providing millions of users in Senegal with a convenient virtual card, protected by Visa's security standards, which makes their everyday online purchases easier and helps strengthen financial inclusion across the country," concluded Sandra Gayibor, Country Manager, Visa Senegal.

Tech In Africa
Aug 10th, 2025
Wave Taps Former MTN Executive Joël Bertrand Ndjodo to Lead Cameroon Push Amid Intensifying Mobile Money Battle

Wave recently secured a €117 million debt facility led by Rand Merchant Bank, with contributions from development finance institutions including Norfund, Finnfund, and British International Investment, to support its growth across its eight African markets.

The Innovation Village
Jun 30th, 2025
Wave raises $137 million in debt financing to expand mobile money services across Africa

In June, Wave expanded into Cameroon through a partnership with Commercial Bank Cameroon (CBC), further extending its regional footprint.

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