Kenya’s mobile money sector is experiencing significant shifts, according to the latest report from the Communications Authority of Kenya (CA) for the first quarter of 2025.
- Declining Dominance of M-Pesa: Market Share: M-Pesa’s market share has decreased to 90.8%, continuing a downward trend over the past six quarters.
- Airtel Money’s Ascendancy: Airtel Money has reached a record 9.1% market share, up from just 3.1% in December 2022, marking a tripling of its share as M-Pesa lost 6% points.
Factors Driving the Shift:
- Pricing Advantage: Airtel Money charges KSh11 for sending KSh1,000 across networks, compared to KSh13 on M-Pesa.
- Customer Incentives: Airtel has introduced attractive campaigns, including fee refunds and cashback offers like the “Rudishiwa” initiative.
- Agent Network Growth: Airtel has expanded its agent network by nearly 78% year-on-year through strategic partnerships and dedicated outlets, challenging M-Pesa’s historical distribution advantage.
- Interoperability Gains: The Central Bank of Kenya unveil of mobile money wallet interoperability has made switching platforms easier for customers, diminishing M-Pesa’s network effects.
In response to these competitive pressures, Safaricom has committed US$309 million to modernize M-Pesa into a cloud-native, scalable platform to enhance speed, reliability, and innovation.
While M-Pesa holds a significant lead, the evolving market dynamics suggest it can no longer rely solely on its established position. Airtel Money’s growth indicates a burgeoning competitive landscape in Kenya’s fintech sector.
The introduction of agent-level interoperability is anticipated to intensify competition, raising critical questions about Airtel Money’s ability to sustain its momentum and whether M-Pesa can adapt swiftly enough to maintain its dominance.