Route one: traditional remitters (Western Union, MoneyGram, Ria) — reliable but expensive, averaging 5–8% all-in, with payout at their own rate. Route two: fintech apps (Remitly, WorldRemit, LemFi, Sendwave, TapTap Send) — cheaper, 1–4%, but rate-managed and limit-capped. Route three: crypto — a stablecoin moves from the sender's exchange to the receiver's Monica address for about $1, and converts at the live market rate. For anything above small amounts, route three wins on arithmetic alone.
USDT is the default — stable value, deep Nigerian liquidity, $1 fees on TRC-20. USDC is equivalent for senders on US platforms. BTC and ETH work (Monica supports both) but add volatility during transit and slower confirmations. For remittance specifically: stablecoins, no contest.
One-time setup: download Monica, verify with BVN or NIN (about 4 minutes), open the USDT wallet, copy the permanent address, and send it to whoever is abroad. Every future transfer needs zero setup — the sender pastes the same address, and the receiver gets a push notification when funds land. Conversion to naira happens at a tap, at the live rate, and bank withdrawal completes in under 60 seconds.
Wrong network is the classic one — if the sender picks TRC-20 on their exchange, the receiver's address must be a TRC-20 address (Monica shows this clearly per network). Second: skipping the small test transfer on first use. Third: leaving conversion for 'later' during a naira rally — convert when you're happy with the rate; the app shows it live.
Fees shown are typical all-in costs including exchange-rate markup — the honest number, not the advertised one.
| Route | Fees on $500 | Typical timing | What the receiver actually gets |
|---|---|---|---|
| USDT → Monica.cash | 0% platform fee — only the network fee (~$1 on TRC-20) | Seconds to a few minutes on-chain, then under 60 seconds to the bank | ≈ ₦810,000 at the live market rate, full amount, any Nigerian bank |
| Western Union | 5%–8% + exchange-rate markup | Minutes to days | Agent or bank payout at a marked-down rate |
| MoneyGram | 4%–7% + rate markup | Minutes to days | Cash pickup limits apply ($200 per IMTO payout rules) |
| Bank wire (SWIFT) | $25–$50 flat + correspondent fees | 2–5 business days | Lands in a domiciliary account at the official rate |
| Fintech remitters (Remitly, WorldRemit, etc.) | 1%–4% + rate spread | Minutes to 2 days | Rate is set by the app, usually below the open market |
Your family member (or you, on the Nigeria side) downloads Monica from Google Play or the App Store and completes KYC — BVN or NIN plus a selfie, about 4 minutes.
Inside the app, choose USDT and pick a network — TRC-20 is the popular choice for remittance because the network fee is about $1 and confirmation takes seconds to a couple of minutes.
From any exchange or wallet abroad — Coinbase, Kraken, Binance, Bybit, or a self-custody wallet — send USDT to the Monica address. The blockchain doesn't care about borders, weekends, or banking hours.
Once the deposit confirms on-chain, naira credits the Monica balance at the live rate. Bank withdrawal completes in under 60 seconds — Opay, Kuda, GTBank, Zenith, all Nigerian banks.
"School fees deadline was the next morning. USDT from the US to naira in my account the same night. That saved my semester."
"Sent $500 from Italy on a Sunday night. My brother confirmed the Kuda alert before we finished the phone call."
"I compared everything — MoneyGram, bank wire, even cash with travellers. Stablecoin transfer beat all of them on cost and speed."
"Sent my mum's hospital bill money from Italy at 2am. She paid the hospital before 7am. Nothing else I know can do that."
USDT on the TRC-20 network — dollar-stable value, ~$1 network fee, confirmation in seconds to minutes, and the deepest naira liquidity of any crypto asset.
They don't need to. They install Monica once, verify, and after that their entire experience is a bank alert. You handle the sending side; the app handles the conversion.
Yes. The blockchain has no corridor restrictions — USA, UK, Canada, UAE, Germany, anywhere. What varies by country is which exchange the sender uses to buy the USDT.
Sender side: whatever their exchange charges to buy USDT (often 0–0.5%). Network: ~$1 on TRC-20. Nigeria side: 0% on Monica. Total on $500: roughly $1–$3.50, versus $25–$40 through a traditional remitter.
Yes. Following the CBN's December 2023 reversal of the 2021 banking restriction and the SEC's Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) framework — with provisional licences issued to Nigerian exchanges from August 2024 — receiving and converting stablecoins is legal in Nigeria.
Buying USDT: instant on a funded exchange account. Transfer: seconds to a few minutes on TRC-20. Conversion + naira payout on Monica: under 60 seconds after confirmation. Realistic door-to-door: under 10 minutes, any hour, any day.
0% platform fees on the Nigeria side. Live market rate. Every Nigerian bank. Set the route up once — use it for years.
Download Monica