Ripple took an equity stake in Africa's largest payments processor to embed its RLUSD stablecoin into a network already moving billions of dollars.
Ripple bought into Flutterwave's Series E funding round, valuing the African payments company at $3.2 billion, as part of a plan to integrate its RLUSD stablecoin across 35 African markets.
"By merging traditional fiat payment methods, including local cards, mobile wallets, and bank transfers, with Ripple's enterprise blockchain technology, the partnership eliminates the historical friction points of African cross-border payments," Flutterwave said in a statement Tuesday.
Flutterwave, which has raised more than $500 million to date, processes payments across 35 African countries and has handled over $50 billion in transactions since its founding in 2016. Under the deal, Ripple's USD-denominated stablecoin RLUSD will be embedded into Flutterwave's payment infrastructure and Send App remittance channels to settle high-volume transactions, with the XRP Ledger providing the clearing layer.
The partnership gives Ripple direct access to one of the world's most challenging cross-border payment markets, where sending money across African borders costs about 8 percent on average and can take days due to fragmented banking systems and routing through European correspondent banks.
Flutterwave founder and CEO Olugbenga Agboola described the deal as a step toward African sovereignty in digital finance. "This partnership is a catalyst for Nigerian and African sovereignty in the digital financial age, ensuring our markets are primary participants in the global digital asset revolution," he said.
The investment extends a broader push by Flutterwave into blockchain-based payments. In October 2025, the company introduced stablecoin solutions for businesses in partnership with Polygon Labs. Earlier this year, it acquired Nigerian open banking provider Mono to adopt its API technology, and it recently secured a banking license in Nigeria, enabling it to accept deposits and accelerate product development.
RLUSD's Path to Real-World Volume
For Ripple, the Flutterwave deal represents one of its most concrete stablecoin deployments to date. Rather than relying on exchange listings to drive RLUSD adoption, the company has embedded its dollar-backed token into a payments system that already processes billions of dollars in real transaction volume.
Cross-border payments in Africa remain the most expensive in the world, according to World Bank data, with average costs exceeding 8 percent — more than double the G20's target of 3 percent. By settling transactions in RLUSD on the XRP Ledger, Flutterwave aims to bypass the traditional correspondent banking chain that routes African payments through London or New York, cutting settlement times from days to near-instant.
The deal also strengthens Ripple's position in emerging markets, where it has been expanding its payments network. Flutterwave operates in 35 countries across the continent, giving RLUSD a distribution footprint that would take years to build organically.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.