Fintech company OPay has opened a new office in Kaduna, a move it says is aimed at deepening financial inclusion across northern Nigeria. OPay launched the office in June 2026, describing it as a step toward bringing secure, convenient and inclusive financial services closer to customers, merchants, agents and businesses in the state.

What the OPay office offers
The company said the new location strengthens its ability to provide localised support, deepen community engagement and contribute to economic activity in the area. By placing staff and services nearer to users, OPay aims to resolve issues faster and build trust among customers and the agents who power much of Nigeria’s everyday digital payments. The office is positioned as both a service point and a base for growth.
A push for financial inclusion
OPay has played a significant role in expanding access to digital payments, transfers and savings for tens of millions of Nigerians. Financial inclusion remains a national priority, with many people still underserved by traditional banking. Fintech firms have helped close that gap through phones and agent networks, reaching communities where bank branches are scarce. The Kaduna move fits that broader strategy.
Leadership’s view
A senior OPay executive described Kaduna as a city of enterprise, innovation and opportunity, and said the company was proud to strengthen its presence there. The framing positions the expansion as part of a long-term commitment to underserved communities rather than a one-off opening. It also signals confidence in northern markets as a growth area for digital finance.
Why it matters
Expanding fintech access can support small businesses, ease everyday transactions and pull more Nigerians into the formal financial system. For a country with a large informal economy, that shift carries real economic weight. As competition among payment providers grows, moves like new regional offices are part of how firms try to win and keep customers across the country.
Inside Nigeria’s fintech boom
Nigeria has become one of Africa’s most dynamic fintech markets, with a wave of companies competing to serve a young, mobile-first population, many of whom remain underserved by traditional banks. Agent networks, where local operators offer cash-in and cash-out services using phones and point-of-sale devices, have been central to extending financial access into markets and neighbourhoods far from bank branches. Firms have grown rapidly by making everyday transactions, transfers and savings simpler and cheaper, and competition among the leading players has intensified as they chase the same customers and merchants. Regulators have set ambitious financial-inclusion targets, viewing digital finance as a way to bring more Nigerians into the formal economy and reduce reliance on cash. Expansion into regional hubs like Kaduna fits this competitive landscape, as providers seek to build loyalty through closer, localised support. The sector is not without challenges, including fraud risks, network reliability and the need to maintain customer trust. Still, the momentum behind fintech in Nigeria remains strong, and moves like new offices signal that companies see continued room to grow across the country’s diverse and largely young population.
The Kaduna launch adds to OPay’s expanding footprint in Nigeria. Viorah TV will continue to follow developments in the country’s fast-growing fintech sector.