Nigeria leads the world in crypto cross-border payments as stablecoin use hits 40% amid naira freefall
While Wall Street debates Bitcoin's "digital gold" narrative and Ethereum's "ultrasound money" thesis, a very different kind of crypto revolution is happening in West Africa.
Four in ten Nigerians now use cryptocurrency for cross-border payments, nearly four times the global average of 11%, according to a new benchmark index from Thunes and Juniper Research, underscoring how currency collapse and banking exclusion have turned stablecoins into everyday financial infrastructure for millions.
The Thunes Cross-Border Payments Interoperability Index is a first-of-its-kind global benchmark, co-developed with Juniper Research, quantifying the ease of cross-border transactions within 50 countries. It is the most comprehensive independent study of cross-border payments friction published to date.
In the 12 months ending June 2024, Nigeria processed nearly $22 billion in stablecoin transactions, accounting for roughly 43% of all crypto volume in Sub-Saharan Africa .
This is not a story of degens chasing moonshots. It is a story of people using stablecoins as digital dollars to preserve savings, bypass expensive intermediaries, and transact in a financial system that has failed them.
Here are 6 lessons for Western markets are profound
1. The numbers that natter: Nigeria’s quiet crypto dominance
Metric
Value
Global Comparison
Nigerians using crypto for cross-border payments
40%
Global average: 11%
Stablecoin transactions (July 2023–June 2024)
$22 billion
~43% of Sub-Saharan Africa’s volume
Peer-to-peer trading volume (monthly)
$2.4 billion+
Largest in Africa
Nigerians who have never heard of stablecoins
19%
Global average: 38%
Nigerian fintech inclusion rate (2023)
~64%
Leaving ~36% unbanked
Traditional remittance fee (Q3 2024)
8.45%
Stablecoin cost: <$1 per transfer
Naira depreciation (2023–2025)
>60%
From ~460 to ~1,500 per USD
The staggering adoption numbers reveals stablecoins is not a speculative vehicle but a survival tool. staggering, but they reflect necessity, not enthusiasm. Nigeria’s macroeconomic environment has been brutal: the naira depreciated by more than 60% between 2023 and early 2025, inflation has hovered around 20%, and foreign exchange shortages have made accessing dollars through official channels nearly impossible for ordinary citizens .
2. The three drivers of Nigeria’s crypto utility
i. Naira devaluation: when your currency is melting
The most immediate driver of Nigeria’s crypto adoption is the collapse of the naira’s purchasing power. When the currency you earn and save in loses 60% of its value in two years, any hedge becomes attractive and stablecoins like USDT and USDC offer direct exposure to the US dollar without requiring a foreign bank account .
For Nigerians, converting local income or savings into stablecoins accomplishes three things:
Preserves value against naira depreciation
Provides dollar liquidity without navigating foreign exchange queues
Enables international spending without capital controls
ii. The remittance trap: 8.45% fees are theft
Nigeria receives tens of billions of dollars annually in remittances from its diaspora one of the largest remittance corridors in the world. Traditional services charge an average fee of 8.45% (as of Q3 2024), while digital-first providers have reduced costs to roughly 4% .
Stablecoin transfers, by contrast, settle in minutes and cost under $1 via performant chains like Tron or Solana. For a family receiving $500 monthly from a relative abroad, switching from traditional remittance to stablecoins saves roughly $40 per transaction nearly $500 per year
This is not a marginal improvement. It is transformative for households living on the edge.
iii. Financial exclusion: when the bank says no
Despite fintech progress, only about 64% of Nigerians have access to formal financial services as of 2023, leaving a substantial portion of the population outside the banking system . For the unbanked, stablecoins offer a path to dollar-denominated value storage and transfer without a bank account.
Peer-to-peer trading has become the backbone of this ecosystem. Platforms like Binance P2P, Paxful, and local Telegram exchanges allow users to swap naira for USDT outside institutional infrastructure . The model has democratized access, enabling liquidity across less-banked regions albeit with risks of fraud and counterparty default .
3. The stablecoin bridge: why USDT, not Bitcoin, is the killer app
A crucial distinction emerges from Nigeria’s adoption story: the dominant use case is stablecoins, not volatile crypto assets.
While Bitcoin and Ethereum are held for long-term appreciation, the day-to-day utility comes from USDT, USDC, and other dollar-pegged tokens. These allow Nigerians to:
Store value without naira exposure
Send money globally without intermediaries
Pay international suppliers without foreign exchange delays
Receive freelance income without banking friction
The Thunes report found that only 19% of Nigerian consumers reported never having heard of stablecoins, compared to a global average of 38% . This indicates a level of digital financial literacy that far exceeds most developed markets born not of education programs but of necessity.
For Nigerians, stablecoins are effectively digital dollars. They function as a parallel currency system that operates outside the Central Bank of Nigeria’s capital controls, providing access to hard currency that the official system cannot supply.
4. The regulatory response: control or capitulation?
Nigeria’s government has watched this parallel financial system grow with a mix of alarm and pragmatism. The regulatory response has been aggressive in some dimensions and permissive in others.
The SEC’s N2 billion capital rule
In January 2026, Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) raised the minimum paid-up capital requirement for Digital Assets Exchanges and Custodians from N500 million to N2 billion (approximately $1.3 million at current exchange rates) . The compliance deadline is June 30, 2027.
The rule has split the industry. Supporters argue it will strengthen market resilience and protect investors from undercapitalized operators. Sir Demola Aladekomo, chairman of CHAMS Plc, called the requirement “just okay” when viewed against the scale of transactions and inherent risks in crypto operations .
Critics warn it will kill local competition. Obinna Iwuno, CEO of CBC Blockchain Services, argued that the N2 billion threshold makes Nigeria “the most expensive jurisdiction in the world for crypto license” and will eliminate homegrown startups before they can scale . He called for a tiered licensing regime that protects local innovators.
The CBN’s cautious opening
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), which had previously directed banks to sever service to crypto-linked accounts in 2021, has softened its stance. In December 2023, the CBN released guidelines allowing Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) to open accounts with Nigerian banks .
However, fintech operators continue to seek clearer definitions of permissible activities, arguing that regulatory ambiguity remains a major constraint limiting innovation and institutional participation . Stakeholders have pointed to Singapore’s licensing regime and the EU’s MiCA framework as models Nigeria could adapt.
The Nigerian exchange group’s balanced approach
The Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX Group) has called for a balanced framework that embraces digital assets without abandoning risk discipline. NGX Group Chairman Dr. Umaru Kwairanga stated:
“We remain actively engaged with stakeholders to ensure that innovation, including emerging asset classes, is integrated responsibly within a well-regulated framework” .
5. The informal infrastructure: how Nigerians actually move money
To understand Nigeria’s crypto adoption, you have to look beyond exchanges. The ecosystem is built on peer-to-peer networks, informal agents, and creative financial instruments.
The gift card-crypto hedge
One uniquely Nigerian innovation is the hybrid gift card-crypto portfolio. Gift cards for Amazon, Apple, Google Play, and other platforms are denominated in foreign currencies and retain international value regardless of naira fluctuations . They function as short-term dollar proxies.
When the naira weakens, gift card resale rates in naira typically rise. Traders combine these with stablecoins and major cryptocurrencies to create a diversified hedge: gift cards for short-term liquidity, stablecoins for dollar pegging, and Bitcoin/Ethereum for long-term appreciation .
This is not a strategy designed by a Wall Street quant. It is grassroots financial engineering born of survival.
P2P as the primary on-ramp
With formal banking channels largely closed to crypto, peer-to-peer trading became the lifeblood of Nigeria’s crypto economy . Platforms like Binance P2P and local Telegram exchanges allow users to find counterparties willing to exchange naira for USDT, with escrow services and reputation systems providing some protection against fraud.
The P2P model has democratized access, enabling liquidity across less-banked regions. However, it comes with risks: fraud, counterparty defaults, and lack of formal dispute mechanisms . Over time, fintech platforms and local agents have begun bridging into these P2P flows, gradually giving the ecosystem more structure.
6. What Wall Street gets wrong: the speculation bias
The contrast between Nigerian and Western crypto adoption is instructive. In the United States and Europe, crypto discourse remains fixated on:
These are not irrelevant questions. But they miss the forest for the trees. In Nigeria, no one is debating whether Bitcoin will reach $100,000. They are asking: “How do I pay my supplier in China when the banks won’t give me dollars?” and “How do I receive my freelance payment without losing 10% to fees?”
The killer use case for cryptocurrency is not speculation. It is access. Access to dollar liquidity in countries with capital controls. Access to global payments without intermediaries. Access to value storage when your local currency is melting.
Wall Street views crypto as an asset class. Nigeria views it as infrastructure.
What happens next
The Thunes report’s finding 40% of Nigerians using crypto for cross-border payments is not a peak. It is a baseline. As naira pressures persist and digital literacy grows, adoption is likely to increase.
Several trends bear watching:
Trend
Implication
Continued naira pressure
Sustained demand for stablecoins as a store of value
SEC regulatory implementation
May formalize the industry but could suppress innovation
CBN clarity on fintech crypto activities
Could unlock institutional participation
Competition from China’s e-CNY
Potential alternative dollar hedge
Expansion of P2P infrastructure
Deeper liquidity, better consumer protections
For global observers, Nigeria’s crypto experiment is a stress test of a hypothesis that has long been debated in Western boardrooms: that cryptocurrency’s primary value lies in providing access to dollar liquidity in capital-controlled environments. The data suggests the hypothesis is correct.
Conclusion: true utility is not on a chart
The 40% adoption figure from the Thunes report is not an abstract statistic. It represents millions of Nigerians who have chosen to bypass a broken financial system — not because they are ideological crypto-maximalists, but because the alternative is watching their savings evaporate or paying 8.45% to send money home.
Wall Street has spent 2026 obsessing over ETF outflows, max pain traps, and whether Bitcoin can hold $75,000. Meanwhile, in Lagos and Abuja and Port Harcourt, people are using USDT to pay suppliers, receive freelance income, and preserve value against a collapsing naira. They are not waiting for regulatory clarity. They are not trading on leverage. They are using crypto, as a tool, not a bet.
The four words that capture the lesson for Wall Street are simple: “Utility is not speculation.”
Moses Edozie is a writer and storyteller with a deep interest in cryptocurrency, blockchain innovation, and Web3 culture. Passionate about DeFi, NFTs, and the societal impact of decentralized systems, he creates clear, engaging narratives that connect complex technologies to everyday life.