Across Africa, digital payments have transitioned from a convenience to an essential driver of economic activity.
As commerce increasingly transcends national borders, the demand for seamless, reliable cross-border transactions has intensified.
In response, Verve has launched a deliberate continental expansion under its Destination Campaign, positioning itself not merely as a domestic card scheme, but as a pan-African payments enabler.
With over 100 million cards issued, Verve has achieved significant scale within domestic markets. The next phase focuses on enhancing interoperability across African corridors, with East Africa, particularly Kenya and Uganda, serving as the primary testing ground for this African Expansion Drive.
Vincent Ogbunude, managing director of Verve International, emphasized the strategic importance of African-owned payment infrastructure in facilitating cross-border commerce and reinforcing economic resilience:
“Africa’s economic potential depends on payments infrastructure that is designed for its unique realities. Verve’s expansion into East Africa goes beyond issuing cards, it is about creating a network of payment infrastructure that is secure, reliable, and purpose-built for the continent. By enabling entrepreneurs, SMEs, corporates, and everyday travellers to transact seamlessly across borders, we are ensuring that value remains within African markets, fostering economic integration, and demonstrating that Africa can build world-class financial systems from within.”
The choice of East Africa is highly strategic. The region’s mature digital banking ecosystem, robust regulatory frameworks, and vibrant commercial networks provide an ideal environment to validate cross-border acceptance and infrastructure integration.
Verve’s expansion model leverages a hybrid advantage, combining the reliability and local alignment of a domestic scheme with growing cross-border capabilities.
This approach allows African markets to transact regionally without excessive reliance on external settlement systems.
Significant progress has already been achieved. Key issuing partners, including FCMB, Union Bank, Jaiz Bank, Taj Bank, and Access Bank, have enabled cardholders to use Verve cards confidently beyond Nigeria.
On the acquiring side, partnerships with KCB, Equity Bank and others are embedding acceptance across East Africa’s merchant ecosystem, strengthening the practical infrastructure required for seamless regional payments.
Cherry Eromosele, executive vice president, group marketing and Corporate Communications at Interswitch Group, highlighted the tangible benefits this expansion brings to consumers, businesses, and regional trade:
“Our vision is to contextualise payments for African realities. By extending Verve’s trusted domestic infrastructure into East Africa, we are enabling consumers and businesses to transact across borders with the same convenience and security they enjoy at home. This expansion is not simply about issuing cards; it is about facilitating transactions and exchange of value, supporting regional commerce, and strengthening financial connectivity across the continent.”
Significantly, Verve has extended its reach beyond financial institutions to secure real-world merchant acceptance. Cardholders can now transact seamlessly at Kenya Commercial Bank ATMs and POS, prominent lifestyle and hospitality destinations, including The Carnivore Restaurant, Tamarind Hotels, Tamarind Dhow, Roast by Carnivore, Kengeles, and Social House.
These channels and venues serve as strategic touchpoints within the continent’s business and tourism ecosystems.
By ensuring acceptance in high-traffic, high-visibility locations, Verve transforms payment infrastructure into a seamless, lived experience.
This expansion is not about scale for its own sake, it is about relevance, adaptability, and reinforcing Africa’s internal economic connectivity.
As trade corridors deepen and mobility across the continent grows, interoperable payments are becoming indispensable infrastructure.
Through its East Africa rollout, Verve demonstrates that Africa’s financial future can be powered by solutions designed and built from within for African realities and scaled to meet continental ambitions.




