Africa does not need another crypto exchange. It needs infrastructure that makes crypto invisible — where sending USDT from Lagos to Accra feels like a bank transfer, not a blockchain transaction.
The numbers tell the story: Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and Ghana consistently rank in the top 10 for crypto adoption globally. But look beneath the surface and the motivation is different from the West. Africans are not trading meme coins for fun. They are using USDT to preserve purchasing power, to pay suppliers across borders, to receive remittances without losing 10% to middlemen.
This is the opportunity ZWAP was built for.
The Infrastructure Gap
Existing solutions force users through painful flows: create a wallet, write down a seed phrase, buy on an exchange, transfer to another exchange, convert to fiat, withdraw to bank. Each step loses time, money, and users.
ZWAP collapses this into one step: send crypto, get naira. No wallet creation. No seed phrases. No intermediate steps. The moment USDT lands on your ZWAP address, naira appears in your balance. Under 60 seconds.
What Comes Next
We are expanding to Ghana, Kenya, and South Africa — each market with its own unique pain points but the same fundamental need: fast, cheap, reliable crypto-to-fiat infrastructure.
The future of crypto in Africa is not about making it more complex. It is about making it invisible.