Donald Trump sees enormous potential in the global spread of the dollar following the passage of a stablecoin regulation bill. But on the ground, reality tells a very different story — and Africa is the proof.
Stafford Masie, executive chairman of Africa Bitcoin Corporation, says that in parts of Africa, vendors have simply stopped accepting dollars. What they take instead is satoshis.
The numbers back him up. Between July 2024 and June 2025, sub-Saharan Africa saw Bitcoin transaction volumes climb by 52%, making it the third fastest-growing region in the world for crypto activity. March 2025 alone saw transaction volumes spike to nearly $25 billion — a surge that came right on the heels of yet another naira devaluation in Nigeria.
Nigeria processed over $92 billion in crypto during that same stretch — nearly triple the volume of second-place South Africa. Bitcoin accounts for 89% of all crypto purchases in Nigeria, compared to just 51% in dollar-dominated markets.
In the West, when people talk about money losing value, they mean 4–5% a year. In parts of Africa, that can happen in a single day. And switching to dollars isn’t much of a solution either, given that the greenback itself erodes at roughly the same 4–5% annually.
Masie also points to the demographics. More than a quarter of Africa’s population is under 20. For young Africans, Bitcoin isn’t some niche interest — it’s mainstream. That said, most of them have no interest in wrestling with seed phrases, multisig wallets, or the deeper technical side of things.
The path most users take is the one with the least friction: crypto payment gateways. A clean mobile interface, no need to understand blockchain mechanics, miner fees, or any of that — just send and receive.
The platforms getting the most traction in the region include Yellow Card, which operates in Nigeria and 14 other African countries; Binance, with its mobile money integrations; BitPesa / AZA Finance, based in Kenya and processing around $1 billion a year through crypto payment rails; IvoryPay, which covers all 54 countries on the continent; and Cryptomus, a gateway that’s been picking up users across Africa thanks to its straightforward interface, mobile app, and broad support for Bitcoin and other networks.
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