| USDT → Monica.cash | NALA | |
|---|---|---|
| All-in cost | ~$1 network fee; 0% platform/conversion/withdrawal | fee-free headline; rate-based monetisation |
| Speed | Minutes on-chain, then under 60s to the bank — 24/7 | Minutes typically |
| Exchange rate | Live USDT/NGN market rate, shown before converting | Operator-set payout rate (margin built in) |
| Limits | No transfer cap; ₦50M/24h default on the receiving account | Corridor and tier limits apply |
| Weekend/night transfers | ✓ Identical to weekday | Varies — payout rails and reviews can queue |
| Where it wins | Cost, speed, rate, availability | Modern app built specifically for african corridors |
Every remittance product answers three questions: what does it cost, how fast is it, and what rate does the receiver get? On cost, NALA's structure — fee-free headline; rate-based monetisation — can't compete with a flat ~$1 network fee. On speed, minutes typically against minutes-around-the-clock. On rate, the operator's payout rate carries the margin that funds the business, while the USDT route hands the receiver the live market rate directly. None of that makes NALA a bad product — modern app built specifically for African corridors is a real advantage in the situations it describes. It makes the stablecoin route the better default for everyone else.
The receiver installs Monica and verifies (about 4 minutes). The sender opens an exchange account where they live if they don't have one, buys USDT, and sends a $10 test to the receiver's address. When the test lands — usually within minutes — the route is proven and every future transfer is a two-minute task. Most families keep their old app installed for a month out of caution, then never open it again.
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.
"My daughter in the US sends USDT now instead of Ria. The naira lands in my Access Bank the same hour — no queue, no agent, no story."
"My brother receives it on Monica and withdraws straight to Kuda. Under a minute after the USDT confirms. Every single time."
"Rent for my family house in Surulere goes through this route now. Landlord gets a bank transfer, I pay no remittance fee at all."
"Sent $500 from Canada on a Sunday night. My brother confirmed the Kuda alert before we finished the phone call."
Yes, and it isn't close. NALA runs fee-free headline; rate-based monetisation. The USDT route costs about $1 in network fees with 0% platform, conversion, and withdrawal fees on the Nigeria side.
NALA: Minutes typically. USDT: seconds-to-minutes on-chain confirmation, then under 60 seconds from conversion to bank alert on Monica — 24/7, weekends and holidays included.
This is usually the biggest difference. NALA's model is Africa-focused remittance app expanding across corridors — and the payout rate is where remitters earn. The USDT route converts at the live USDT/NGN market rate, displayed before the receiver confirms.
Genuine strengths: modern app built specifically for African corridors. If those describe your situation, use it. For the standard case — smartphone on both ends, bank or wallet account in Nigeria — the arithmetic favours the stablecoin route.
A verified Monica account: BVN or NIN plus a selfie, about 4 minutes, free. Their USDT deposit address is permanent — set up once, receive forever.
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.
That's the whole pitch. Set up the Nigeria side free and test it with $10.
Download Monica