For Nigerians in South Africa: money home in minutes for about $1 — at the real naira rate.
The Nigerian community in South Africa counts one of Africa's largest intra-continental Nigerian communities, centred on Johannesburg, concentrated around Johannesburg, Pretoria, Cape Town and Durban. The apps most senders currently use — Mukuru, MoneyGram and Mama Money — all price the corridor with an exchange-rate margin on top of any visible fee. Intra-African remittances are the world's most expensive — often 8–12% on the SA–Nigeria corridor. ZAR to USDT on Luno or VALR, then USDT to a Monica address, collapses that to roughly $1.
Three numbers tell the story. Cost: about $1 in network fees on TRC-20, versus the 8.8% World Bank regional average for traditional routes. Speed: seconds-to-minutes confirmation, then an under-60-second naira payout — at any hour, weekends included. Rate: the receiver converts at the live USDT/NGN market rate, not a remitter's marked-down payout rate; on larger transfers that difference is often worth more than every visible fee combined. Nigeria received $20.93 billion in recorded remittances in 2024 — the share moving on-chain grows every quarter because the arithmetic is this one-sided.
| 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 in South Africa — 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.
"The rate is the real difference. Sendwave pays out at their own rate; with USDT my family gets the open-market rate — that's an extra ₦15k on $500."
"First time I tried it I sent just $20 to test. It worked so fast I sent the real $800 immediately after."
"As a nurse abroad I send money home twice a month. The savings versus Remitly paid for my flight home last December."
"My brother receives it on Monica and withdraws straight to GTBank. Under a minute after the USDT confirms. Every single time."
Buy USDT on Luno, VALR or Binance, withdraw to the receiver's Monica.cash address on the TRC-20 network, and they convert to naira at the live rate. The network fee is about $1; the Nigeria side charges 0%.
The blockchain doesn't know distance — TRC-20 confirms in seconds to a couple of minutes from anywhere. After confirmation, conversion plus bank payout on Monica completes in under 60 seconds. Door to door: usually under 10 minutes.
Typical apps on this corridor charge 1–8% once the exchange-rate markup is counted; the World Bank puts the regional average at 8.8%. The USDT route costs about $1 flat plus whatever your exchange charges to buy — usually under 0.5% total.
Luno, VALR or Binance are the established options for ZAR-to-USDT. Any platform that supports USDT withdrawals works — the destination is just an address.
The live USDT/NGN market rate at the moment they convert — displayed in the Monica app before they confirm. No remitter markup. That rate advantage alone is often worth several percent versus app payouts.
Sending crypto you own is lawful in South Africa (your exchange handles local compliance), and 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.
Yes — the blockchain has no transfer cap. The receiving side's verified Monica account handles ₦50,000,000 per 24 hours by default, with higher limits available on request.
Install Monica, verify with BVN or NIN plus a selfie (about 4 minutes), open the USDT wallet, and send you the TRC-20 address. Do a $10 test together the first time.
Set up the Nigeria side once — a permanent USDT address your family keeps forever. 0% fees on conversion and withdrawal.
Download Monica