
Paystack, the Stripe-backed Nigerian fintech best known for powering online payments, has made a decisive move that signals a new phase in its evolution. By acquiring Ladder Microfinance Bank, Paystack has formally entered regulated banking and lending, expanding its role from a payments infrastructure provider to a broader financial services player. The bank will be rebranded as Paystack Microfinance Bank (Paystack MFB) and operated as a separate, regulated subsidiary within the Paystack group. This acquisition gives Paystack a microfinance banking licence, allowing it to hold deposits and issue loans—activities previously outside the scope of its payments-only licence
This development reflects a wider trend in Africa’s fintech ecosystem, where leading platforms are moving from partnerships with banks toward ownership of regulated entities to gain greater control, flexibility, and long-term strategic advantage
From Payments to Lending: Why the Bank Licence Matters
For nearly a decade, Paystack has processed transactions for hundreds of thousands of Nigerian businesses, but customer funds were always held by partner banks. With the acquisition of a microfinance bank, Paystack now gains direct control over deposits and credit creation, fundamentally changing its position in the financial value chain. According to Paystack’s COO, Amandine Lobelle, the initial focus of Paystack MFB will be business lending, with plans to expand into consumer loans and other financial products over time
This shift is particularly significant in Nigeria, where small and medium-sized enterprises face an estimated ₦13 trillion credit gap, largely due to conservative lending practices by traditional banks. Paystack’s advantage lies in its access to rich transaction data, which can be used to assess cash flows and creditworthiness more accurately than conventional methods. By designing lending products around real payment behaviour, Paystack MFB aims to offer faster, more tailored credit solutions to businesses that are often underserved by the formal banking sector
Competing in a Crowded Fintech Banking Landscape
Paystack’s entry into banking places it in direct competition with digital lenders and fintech banks such as Carbon, Fairmoney, Moniepoint, OPay, PalmPay, and Kuda, many of which already combine payments, deposits, and lending under one platform However, Paystack’s approach differs in that it is building upward from a strong payments infrastructure rather than starting with deposits or consumer banking.
Beyond lending, Paystack MFB plans to offer banking-as-a-service (BaaS) tools, enabling startups to build regulated financial products such as embedded accounts, treasury tools, and credit solutions without holding their own banking licences This positions Paystack not just as a competitor, but as an enabler within Nigeria’s fintech ecosystem.
Ultimately, the acquisition confirms that Paystack no longer sees itself as merely the “payments layer.” Instead, it is positioning to become a core financial platform—one that manages money, extends credit, and powers the next generation of financial products in Nigeria’s digital economy






