Dublin, May 22, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The “Africa Alternative Lending Market Size & Forecast by Value and Volume Across 100+ KPIs by Type of Lending, End-User Segments, Loan Purpose, Finance Models, Distribution Channels, and Payment Instruments – Databook Q1 2026 Update” report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com’s offering.
The alternative lending market in Africa is expected to grow by 14.8% annually, reaching US$5.5 billion by 2026. The alternative lending market in the region has experienced robust growth during 2020-2025, achieving a CAGR of 14.7%. This upward trajectory is expected to continue, with the market forecast to grow at a CAGR of 13.9% from 2026 to 2029. By the end of 2029, the alternative lending market is projected to expand from its 2025 value of US$4.8 billion to approximately US$8.1 billion.
This report provides a detailed data-centric analysis of the alternative lending industry in Africa, offering comprehensive coverage of both overall and alternative lending markets. It covers more than 100+ KPIs, including loan disbursement value, loan disbursement volume, average loan ticket size, and penetration rate.
Competitive Landscape
- Competitive intensity is likely to shift from acquisition speed to licensing, governance, and distribution access as Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana tighten rules. Expect more platform-led partnerships (telcos, wallets, B2B networks) and selective M&A to secure compliant scale and lower customer acquisition costs.
Current State of the Market
- Africa’s alternative lending competition is regionally fragmented: East Africa is shaped by mobile-money distribution, West Africa by enforcement-led consumer-lending oversight, and North Africa by B2B commerce-led credit embedded in supply chains. Regulatory action is increasingly defining “who can compete.” Nigeria’s FCCPC introduced Digital/Electronic/Online/Non-traditional Consumer Lending Regulations in 2025, moving digital lending toward clearer registration and conduct expectations.
- Kenya continues formal supervision through the Central Bank of Kenya’s updated directory of licensed Digital Credit Providers (updated December 24, 2025), which changes go-to-market economics for non-licensed players. Ghana’s Bank of Ghana issued a directive (effective November 1, 2025) on Digital Credit Services Providers, signalling tighter licensing and operating requirements for digital credit delivery.
Key Players and New Entrants
- Telco/mobile-money ecosystems remain key distribution gatekeepers: Safaricom (M-PESA) sets competitive benchmarks for embedded credit, while Orange Money is expanding its credit capabilities through partnerships. Credit infrastructure fintechs (e.g., JUMO) increasingly act as enabling layers for telcos and wallets, rather than competing only as standalone lenders.
- Asset-finance leaders (e.g., Sun King, M-KOPA) compete through device/PAYGo models that link repayment to product usage and servicing discipline. Banks are re-entering the story through regional expansion: Nedbank’s announced acquisition of a majority stake in Kenya’s NCBA highlights intensifying bank-led competition in digitally active markets.
Key Trends & Drivers
Tighten operating models as regulators move from “apps” to supervised credit markets.
- More African markets are shifting alternative lending from a loosely defined “digital loans” category into formal licensing, conduct rules, and enforceable consumer-protection regimes, with regulators explicitly targeting how lenders price, collect, and use customer data.
- Kenya: the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has continued rolling out licensing decisions for Digital Credit Providers as part of a broader push to formalize non-deposit-taking credit activity.
- Nigeria: the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) introduced a 2025 framework for digital / online consumer lending, signalling a more enforcement-led approach to lender behaviour and governance.
- Ghana: The Bank of Ghana issued a 2025 directive for Digital Credit Services Providers, setting expectations around licensing, ownership, systems controls, and supervisory access.
- Borrower harm and reputational risk from aggressive collections and opaque terms pushed supervisors to treat digital lending like a mainstream retail-credit market (not a fintech niche). Mobile-first distribution makes it easy for non-traditional lenders to scale quickly; regulators are reacting by standardizing “who can lend” and “how lending is conducted,” especially around data access and recovery practices.
- Higher barriers to entry: weaker operators exit or consolidate; partnerships with licensed entities become a primary route to market. More auditable lending: stronger reporting, clearer accountability for underwriting/collections, and tighter controls over data use.
- Competitive advantage shifts toward platforms that can run compliant credit at scale (policy, controls, dispute handling), not just acquire borrowers fast.
Win distribution by embedding credit inside mobile money, telco channels, and everyday spend loops.
- Alternative lending is increasingly delivered through high-frequency rails, mobile money, and telecom channels, where credit becomes part of day-to-day liquidity management rather than a standalone loan product.
- Pan-African telco-led lending enablement
- Airtime/telecom-based microcredit at scale
- Always-on payments behaviour
- Merchant and consumer liquidity needs
- Platform economics
- Risk management becomes product design
Scale SME credit by financing inventory and invoices through B2B commerce ecosystems.
- Across Africa, alternative lending is moving “closer to the cash register” for small businesses
- Egypt / regional B2B commerce
- Policy and ecosystem attention on supply chain finance (SCF)
- Retail and informal trade structures
- E-commerce and B2B digitization
- More structured credit products
Expand asset-backed consumer finance as pay-as-you-go models industrialize underwriting and collections.
- PAYGo solar finance
- Energy access gaps and device demand
- Funders prefer controllable risk
- Category spillover
Rebuild trust by hardening affordability, disclosures, and “customer treatment” as a core operating capability.
- Platform dependence
- Product design changes
Reduce currency and funding fragility by shifting from venture-led growth to bank, DFI, and receivables-backed funding.
- Receivables-backed capital
- DFI-backed credit expansion
- Cost of capital sensitivity
- Risk discipline from funders
- More durable lenders emerge
A Bundled Offering, Combining the Following 5 Reports, Covering 700+ Tables and 850+ Figures
- Africa Overall Lending and Alternative Lending Market Business and Investment Opportunities Databook
- Egypt Overall Lending and Alternative Lending Market Business and Investment Opportunities Databook
- Kenya Overall Lending and Alternative Lending Market Business and Investment Opportunities Databook
- Nigeria Overall Lending and Alternative Lending Market Business and Investment Opportunities Databook
- South Africa Overall Lending and Alternative Lending Market Business and Investment Opportunities Databook
Key Attributes:
| Report Attribute | Details |
| No. of Pages | 1000 |
| Forecast Period | 2026 – 2029 |
| Estimated Market Value (USD) in 2026 | $5.5 Billion |
| Forecasted Market Value (USD) by 2029 | $8.1 Billion |
| Compound Annual Growth Rate | 13.9% |
| Regions Covered | Africa |
Report Scope
Macroeconomic Overview: Economic Indicators
- by Gross Domestic Product (Current Prices)
- by Population
- Unemployment Rate
Operational Enablers and Infrastructure Readiness
- Smartphone Penetration
- Internet Connectivity & Broadband Access
- Digital Wallet Adoption Rate
- Real-Time Payments Infrastructure
- E-commerce Penetration
Lending Market Size and Growth Dynamics
- Loan Disbursement Value
- Loan Disbursement Volume
- Average Loan Ticket Size
Lending Market Segmentation by Lending Type
- Bank-based / NBFC Lending
- Alternative Lending
Lending Market Segmentation by End-User
- Retail Lending
- SME / MSME Lending
Retail Lending Market Segmentation by Loan Purpose
- Housing / Mortgage Loans
- Auto Loans
- Education Loans
- Personal Loans
- Other Retail Loan Types (e.g., BNPL, Travel, Green Loans, Payday)
SME / MSME Lending Market Segmentation by Loan Purpose
- Working Capital Loans
- Expansion Loans
- Equipment / Machinery Loans
- Invoice Financing / Factoring
- Trade Finance (Import / Export)
- Real Estate / Commercial Property Loans
- Other SME Lending (e.g., Digital Adoption, Franchise Financing)
Lending Market Segmentation by Distribution Channel
- Branch / Physical
- Direct Digital Lending
- Agent / Broker Channel
Alternative Lending Market Size and Growth Dynamics
- Loan Disbursement Value
- Loan Disbursement Volume
- Average Loan Ticket Size
Alternative Lending Market Segmentation by End-User
- Consumer Lending
- SME / MSME Lending
Alternative Lending Market Segmentation by Finance Models
- P2P Marketplace
- Balance Sheet Lending
- Invoice Trading
- Real Estate Crowdfunding
- Other / Hybrid Models
Combined View: Finance Models by End-User Segments
- P2P Marketplace – Consumer Lending / SME Lending / Property Lending
- Balance Sheet Lending – Consumer Lending / SME Lending / Property Lending
Alternative Lending by Loan Purpose – Consumer Lending
- Personal Loans
- Payroll Advance
- Home Improvement Loans
- Education / Student Loans
- Point-of-Sale (POS) Credit
- Auto Loans
- Medical Loans
- Other Consumer Lending Types
Alternative Lending by Loan Purpose – SME / MSME Lending
- Lines of Credit
- Merchant Cash Advance
- Invoice Factoring
- Revenue-Based Financing
- Other SME Loan Types
Alternative Lending Segmentation by Payment Instrument
- Credit Transfer
- Debit Card
- E-Money
- Other Instruments
Cross-Segmentation: Finance Models across Payment Instruments
- P2P Marketplace across Credit Transfer / Debit Card / E-Money / Other
- Balance Sheet Lending by Payment Instrument
- Invoice Trading by Payment Instrument
- Real Estate Crowdfunding by Payment Instrument
- Other Models by Payment Instrument
Alternative Lending – Borrower-Level Insights: Consumer Demographics & Behavior
- Borrower Distribution by Age Group
- Borrower Distribution by Income Level
- Borrower Distribution by Gender
Alternative Lending Credit Risk & Quality Metrics
- Delinquency Rate (30 Days / 90 Days), 2024
For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/43l2vn
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- African Alternative Lending Market