| USDT → Monica.cash | Sendwave | |
|---|---|---|
| All-in cost | ~$1 network fee; 0% platform/conversion/withdrawal | advertised fee-free; cost sits in the exchange rate |
| 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 | Genuinely fast and simple for small transfers |
Every remittance product answers three questions: what does it cost, how fast is it, and what rate does the receiver get? On cost, Sendwave's structure — advertised fee-free; cost sits in the exchange rate — 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 Sendwave a bad product — genuinely fast and simple for small transfers 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.
"I used to lose almost ₦40,000 in fees every month sending through Remitly. Switched to USDT and my mum gets the full amount in her Kuda."
"Weekend transfers used to be dead time with the banks. USDT doesn't know what a weekend is."
"No more asking my cousin to queue for cash pickup. I send USDT, she taps withdraw, and the money is in her Moniepoint in minutes."
"Sent $500 from the UK on a Sunday night. My brother confirmed the Opay alert before we finished the phone call."
Yes, and it isn't close. Sendwave runs advertised fee-free; cost sits in the exchange rate. The USDT route costs about $1 in network fees with 0% platform, conversion, and withdrawal fees on the Nigeria side.
Sendwave: 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. Sendwave's model is app-based, fee-free headline with rate-based monetisation — 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: genuinely fast and simple for small transfers. 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