Nigerian fintech startup Cardri is transforming the way money moves across Africa, offering cross-border payment services combined with AI-powered financial risk management to small businesses, traders, and entrepreneurs. Over 1,500 users have processed more than $500,000 in transactions through the platform, highlighting its rapid adoption.
Bridging Africa’s Financial Divide
Founded in 2022 by Bolaji Okunade, Yusuf Ibrahim, and Clement David, Cardri began as a solution to international card transaction restrictions. By September 2024, the platform entered open testing and evolved into a financial super app that simplifies payments while integrating compliance and fraud prevention measures for intra-African transactions.
Cardri’s mission aligns with the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), aiming to remove barriers to seamless commerce across African borders.
How Cardri Works
At its core, Cardri is a global money transfer platform and risk management tool. Users can send and receive funds across 20 African countries and 92 global destinations in local currencies instantly. Transfers from Nigeria to Kenya, for instance, are completed in Kenyan shillings without first converting to US dollars, providing transparency and speed.The Citizen
The platform also supports instant domiciliary funding, Alipay top-ups, and Chinese account payments. Authentication is secured via PINs or fingerprints, and the app’s wallet functionality allows users to hold balances, fund accounts, and make real-time payments locally or internationally.
AI-Powered Risk Management
Cardri stands out with its AI-driven risk management engine. Businesses can hedge against currency fluctuations and commodity price volatility, protecting profits and ensuring financial stability. For example, farmers can lock in commodity prices, and manufacturers can stabilize input costs, mitigating the impact of market swings.Business Wire
The AI system analyzes pricing patterns and suggests hedging strategies, enabling affordable participation in derivative trading, with 24/7 instant settlement — unlike traditional stock exchanges.
Business Model and Revenue
Cardri charges transaction fees under 1% per transfer, below traditional banking costs. Currency conversion generates additional revenue, and global payout transactions account for most of the startup’s $8,000 in earnings. Intra-African transfers are currently free to attract users and build trust before scaling paid features.
CEO Bolaji Okunade emphasizes, “Payments are the backbone of business. By fixing how money moves across Africa, we can fix how business works.”Opsel Compliance
Competitive Edge
While Africa’s fintech space is crowded with players like Flutterwave, Chipper Cash, and PAPSS, Cardri differentiates itself through AI integration and accessibility. Its WhatsApp interface allows users to send money, perform transactions with voice commands, or even snap a picture of an account number, making cross-border payment services simpler than ever.
Future Plans
Cardri is awaiting licensing from Nigeria’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to launch its derivatives and financial risk management platform in Q1 2026. A WhatsApp transaction interface is expected by November 2025, expanding access across the continent.
The startup envisions becoming a continental financial infrastructure layer, supporting trade, agriculture, and intra-African commerce. Its broader goal is to democratize financial tools previously reserved for large institutions, empowering SMEs, traders, and farmers to manage risks and safeguard their incomes.MDPI
For businesses and individuals navigating Africa’s trade landscape, Cardri offers a seamless, secure, and innovative solution to move money efficiently across borders.
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This story is based on Techpoint Africa reporting on AI‑powered risk management in cross‑border payments across Africa. Read the full article here.
