Wallets, cards, bills, and transfers come together in one retail path for people who need money to move quickly without losing visibility.
About WapiPay
Built for the routes people and businesses rely on.
Founded in Singapore in 2019, WapiPay supports cross-border payments for individuals, merchants, and businesses. The platform combines app transfers, business payouts, API access, and OTC support across corridors in Africa, Asia, the United Kingdom, and the United States, with physical offices in Nairobi and Kampala.
What We Do
One platform for personal, business, and larger-value payment flows.
WapiPay is built for the real ways money moves every day: personal transfers, merchant and supplier payments, business collections and payouts, and larger-value treasury support when more control is required.
Businesses can use WapiPay for collections, payouts, developer integrations, agents, and reconciliation across the same operating surface.
For larger-value FX and treasury needs, the platform extends into dedicated support while keeping the same emphasis on route clarity and settlement control.
Founded in Singapore. Operated from Nairobi and Kampala.
WapiPay was founded in Singapore and today operates through Nairobi and Kampala, supporting payment activity across Africa, Asia, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
WapiPay serves people and businesses that need payment routes, payout options, and support channels they can understand before using them. The operating story is grounded in real offices, real corridors, and daily payment use across multiple markets.
- Founded Singapore, 2019 WapiPay was founded in Singapore in 2019 to make cross-border payments easier to move and easier to trust.
- Physical Offices Nairobi and Kampala Today, WapiPay operates through Nairobi and Kampala as it supports customers across key global corridors.
- Corridor Reach Africa, Asia, the UK, and the US From Africa to Asia, the UK, and the US, WapiPay supports app transfers, business payouts, and larger settlement needs across supported routes.
Operating Standard
The route, rate, and payout status should be visible.
Cross-border payment products should make the operational details clear: what the customer sends, what the receiver should get, how the payout is routed, and how the movement can be tracked or supported.
Tracked clearly
Customers should know what the route is doing, what the rate means, and where the money is headed before movement begins.
Received with certainty
Whether the customer is sending for trade, payroll, supplier payout, or personal transfer, the receiver should get a result that feels instant and dependable.