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Fintech25 November 2025

Unlimit Partners with ShipAfrica to Unlock Local Payments for Cross-Border Deliveries Across Africa

Africa’s cross-border e-commerce market is accelerating fast—and two major players just teamed up to remove one of its biggest pain points: payments. Unlimit and ShipAfrica have announced a new partnership designed to make it dramatically easier for shoppers and businesses to pay for international deliveries using familiar, local payment methods. As digital retail expands across […]

Unlimit Partners with ShipAfrica to Unlock Local Payments for Cross-Border Deliveries Across Africa

Africa’s cross-border e-commerce market is accelerating fast—and two major players just teamed up to remove one of its biggest pain points: payments.
Unlimit and ShipAfrica have announced a new partnership designed to make it dramatically easier for shoppers and businesses to pay for international deliveries using familiar, local payment methods.

As digital retail expands across the continent, the ability to pay in local currencies and through trusted domestic channels is quickly becoming a competitive advantage. This new integration aims to do exactly that.

A New Step Forward for Africa’s Cross-Border Commerce

Under the partnership, ShipAfrica now taps directly into Unlimit’s global and regional payment infrastructure, enabling customers to complete transactions seamlessly across multiple countries.

The rollout is already underway:

  • Kenya: Pesalink, M-Pesa, Airtel Money
  • Tanzania: M-Pesa, Airtel Money, Mixx
  • Nigeria: Bank transfers and cards

Global card schemes are also expected to go live in additional African markets, broadening options for shoppers and merchants transacting from abroad.

Why This Partnership Matters

ShipAfrica, a platform used by both individual shoppers and growing businesses, connects African buyers and sellers with destinations worldwide. But international transactions are often slowed down—or fail entirely—because customers prefer local payment tools over global ones.

This integration aims to fix that. By accepting payments directly in the markets where users operate, ShipAfrica expects fewer failed transactions, lower costs, and a more inclusive checkout experience.

“This eliminates the friction of international payment processing, reduces transaction costs, and improves access for consumers who prefer local payment methods,” says Walter Isoko, CEO of ShipAfrica.

Unlimit’s Growing Footprint in Africa

Unlimit, launched in 2009, offers payments, banking-as-a-service, and financial technology infrastructure across global markets. With offices in 17 locations—including London, Singapore, and São Paulo—the company supports more than 700 employees worldwide.

The company’s expansion in Africa aligns with broader regional trends. Africa’s online retail market is projected to hit $61.78 billion by 2030, fueled by mobile-first consumers and rising demand for fast, secure, local-friendly payment experiences.

“Our partnership with ShipAfrica helps businesses scale by giving their customers access to familiar, reliable payment experiences across borders,” says Irene Skrynova, Chief Customer Officer at Unlimit.

“Together, we’re reducing operational costs, avoiding settlement delays, improving cash flow, and enabling merchants to tap into the full potential of Africa’s fast-growing e-commerce economy.”

The Bigger Picture: Local Payments Are Becoming Essential

The partnership highlights a major industry shift: payment localisation is now a core strategy for e-commerce growth across Africa. As more consumers choose digital wallets, instant transfers, and mobile money, logistics and fintech companies are scrambling to match these preferences across borders.

Unlimit and ShipAfrica’s collaboration signals a push toward simpler trade routes, faster cross-border deliveries, and more inclusive commerce—especially for small and mid-sized businesses looking to expand internationally.

Final Takeaway

Cross-border shopping is no longer a luxury—it’s becoming the norm for millions of Africans. With partnerships like this, merchants gain smoother operations, while consumers get more payment freedom than ever before.

Do you think African e-commerce can grow even faster once local payments become fully standard across borders?

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INTELLIGENCE SOURCE:INVENTRIUM RESEARCH
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