
Payment gateway selection is framed as a technical decision. In practice, across most African startups, it is a social, operational, and risk decision — made with incomplete information, under time pressure, and heavily influenced by who the founder spoke to last week.
The official version of how startups choose payment infrastructure goes something like this: the technical co-founder evaluates the API documentation, compares transaction fees, checks supported payment methods, reviews the developer experience, and recommends the gateway that best fits the product roadmap.
The actual version, in most Nigerian, Ghanaian, and Kenyan startups, looks quite different. The founder asks two or three people they trust — typically other founders, a developer friend, a more experienced operator — what gateway they use and whether they have had problems with it. The recommendation from that conversation drives 80% of the decision. The API documentation review happens after, to confirm rather than discover.
Why trust networks dominate the decision
This is not irrationality. It is a rational response to information asymmetry. Payment gateway performance data is not publicly available in any reliable, comparable form. Uptime statistics are self-reported. Success rate data is proprietary. Support quality is impossible to assess before you need it. In this environment, the most credible signal available is the direct experience of someone operating a similar business in the same market.
The social recommendation carries information that no rate card or documentation page can convey: whether the gateway’s settlement actually arrived on schedule during a high-volume period, whether support was reachable during an incident, whether the reconciliation tools work well enough for a non-technical founder to manage.
The compliance discovery problem
One of the most consistent pain points in how African startups choose payment infrastructure is the discovery of compliance requirements after the integration is already built. KYC documentation requirements, business registration prerequisites, CAC certificate obligations, and account verification workflows are often not prominently communicated during the sales or onboarding process.
Startups build integrations, begin processing transactions, and then discover mid-operation that they need to supply documentation they do not yet have — triggering account holds, settlement delays, or processing restrictions at the worst possible time. Founders who have experienced this once tend to include compliance clarity in their evaluation criteria the second time. This hard-won knowledge rarely appears in formal comparison guides — it circulates in the same founder communities where reliability experiences are shared.
OPERATIONAL INSIGHT
In the Nigerian startup ecosystem specifically, Paystack benefits significantly from first-mover trust network effects. Its early developer community, well-regarded documentation, and strong word-of-mouth among technical founders created a recommendation network that has compounded over years. New founders asking ‘what payment gateway should I use’ frequently receive Paystack as the default answer before they have articulated any specific requirements — a market position that took years to build and is genuinely difficult for newer entrants to replicate quickly.
When startups switch — and why
Understanding when and why African startups switch payment providers reveals more about the real decision framework than understanding initial selection. The triggers for switching are remarkably consistent: a reliability incident during a high-stakes period, a support failure during a critical operational problem, a settlement delay that created a cash flow crisis, or a fee structure that became untenable at a new transaction volume level.
What is notable is what does not trigger switching: competitor feature announcements, marginally better API documentation, or slightly lower transaction fees. The switching cost of a payment migration — rebuilding integrations, re-testing checkout flows, re-training operations staff — is high enough that most startups will absorb modest dissatisfaction rather than switch. The failures that do drive migration are operational rather than commercial, and they tend to be acute rather than chronic.
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