Mr Nyasinga Onyancha, the CEO of SimbaPay. PHOTO | FILE
By LILIAN OCHIENG', laochieng@ke.nationmedia.com
Kenyans in the European Union can now send bulk cash
home and buy property across the continent through SimbaPay’s mobile app
that transfers up to Sh4.5 million.
The local digital money transfer firm SimbaPay has
partnerships with KCB, Family Bank, M-Pesa and Co-op Bank. It is also
useful to customers with MasterCard or VisaCard debit card or credit
card.
To send money via SimbaPay, Kenyans living abroad
with these bank accounts can download the SimbaPay app from the Apple
AppStore or Google Play. They can then proceed to make cash transfers
straight from any mobile phone, tablet or computer.
Victor Karanja, the head of operations at SimbaPay,
says working with these lenders eliminates the need for customers
having to remember branch codes.
“Customers in the past have been having to undertake multiple transfers to complete a single purchase,” said Mr Karanja.
The limit of transfers per transaction has now
risen from the initial Sh300,000 that users could send earlier last
year, as the firm launched its services locally. Users can now send a
limit of Sh4.5 million via the platform.
“Our customers want to pay vendors in Kenya faster
and without having to go through friends and family,” Nyasinga Onyancha,
the chief executive of SimbaPay said during the launch last year.
“This new product allows them to do just that,
especially for time-sensitive payments such as those to hospitals,
stockbrokers and the like.”
Kenyans in the EU can now easily complete larger
purchases in Africa such as property, vehicles and paying large hospital
bills or university fees via the SimbaPay app.
Those transferring between Sh300,000 and higher
automatically qualify for discounted exchange rates, says Simba Pay,
adding the cash is credited instantly to the mobile money wallet,
merchant or bank account.
Apart from direct transfers to mobile money
services such as M-Pesa and bank accounts, it is also possible to pay
school fees and utility companies, said Mr Karanja.
Exchange rate fluctuation
Bulk transfers across countries is a challenge to
many service providers save for a few such as global brands like
MoneyGram and Western Union.
East African countries, for instance, are grappling
with technical hitches barring smooth transactions. One of the
difficulties is the huge taxes of up to Sh40,000 across mobile money in
East African Community.
This is because switch systems operating across
M-Pesa, Airtel Money and Telkom Kenya to other regional networks like
MTN, Tigo, Uganda Telecom and Africell are not in place.
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