PayPal is crawling back to Nigeria for growth, cash, and relevance, while locals side-eye motives shaped by old restrictions and new fintech muscle.
Why PayPal is back
Why PayPal is back
- PayPal hunts fresh revenue as Western growth cools.
- Stock value has cratered hard, adding pressure to expand abroad.
- Africa sits front and center in the recovery playbook.
- Nigerian accounts once worked one-way, cash out only, never cash in.
- Fraud fears and weak ID systems were blamed for tight controls.
- Freelancers and small firms got locked out for years.
- Local fintechs filled the vacuum and kept scaling anyway.
- Cross-border payments thrived without PayPal’s help.
- Banks and startups grabbed remittances and global transfers.
- PayPal World ties global payments to local wallets.
- Users skip foreign accounts and pay globally from home wallets.
- Checkout buttons bridge PayPal with domestic providers.
- Paga anchors the Nigerian entry.
- Wallet linking opens access to PayPal’s massive network.
- A $100 million war chest targets fintech tie-ups.
- Nigeria dominates African remittance flows.
- Competition is fierce, fast, and already unicorn-heavy.
- Market consolidation looks like the long game.
- Some fear data mining before sidelining partners.
- Past fund freezes still haunt user trust.
- Transparency concerns refuse to disappear.