The Moniepoint 10th Anniversary marks a decade of radical transformation in African fintech. What began in 2015 as a small team in a 1004 apartment has evolved into a $1 billion pillar of Nigeria’s financial system.
“If you were my brother, I would not tell you to do what you’re about to do,”
That was the warning one early employee received before joining the mission. Today, that risk has paid off, as the company celebrates its Moniepoint 10th Anniversary by looking back at its “invisible” origins.
A decade later, Moniepoint isn’t just a fintech; it is the heartbeat of the Nigerian real economy. But to understand the “Unicorn” of 2025, you have to understand the Invisible Infrastructure of 2015.
The Era of the Undercurrent: Powering the Giants
Before the blue POS terminals took over every street corner in Nigeria, Moniepoint (then TeamApt) was the industry’s best-kept secret. They were the silent architects of Nigerian banking.
Through their middleware product, Profectus, they built the plumbing that commercial banks relied on for reconciliation and transaction processing. The transcript of their journey reveals a “mercenary” lifestyle: engineers sleeping in bank server rooms at First Bank and Fidelity, coding through the night to fix systems they didn’t even own.
They were invisible, but they were learning. They saw exactly where the traditional banks were failing: the slow settlements, the 24-hour delays, and the technical debt. They weren’t just fixing the banks; they were documenting the blueprint for a better system.
The “Sink or Swim” School of Tech
The culture that built this empire was brutal and brilliant. In the early days, onboarding didn’t exist. New hires were “dropped in the middle of the ocean” to see if they could swim. This produced a core team with immense technical depth, people who could automate transfer payments when the rest of the industry said it was impossible.
This grit was tested in 2020. While the world locked down, the “Invisible Infrastructure” phase ended. They realized that the same technology they used to help banks reconcile millions could be used to help a woman in a remote village accept a transfer instantly.
From Backend Support to the Industry’s Nightmare
The pivot to agency banking and the birth of Monnify changed everything. By pioneering virtual accounts, Moniepoint did what the big banks couldn’t: they made trust instant.
The nightmare for the traditional industry began when Moniepoint stopped being a vendor and started being a competitor. They took the “real economy” the roadside traders, the gas stations, and the supermarkets- and gave them banking tools that actually worked.
Today, Moniepoint processes over ₦400 trillion annually. They have moved from Tosin’s apartment to a global stage, recently raising $200 million in Series C funding to solidify their status as a Pan-African powerhouse.
The Next Decade: Owning the Ocean
As they celebrate 10 years, the goal has shifted again. With the launch of MonieWorld in the UK and a focus on the African diaspora, the infrastructure that once sat hidden in Nigerian server rooms is now a global contender.
The skeptics of 2015, who said virtual accounts “would never see the light of day,” are now the ones playing catch-up. For Moniepoint, the last decade was about proving they could swim. The next decade is about showing the world how they own the ocean.










