By Hannes Wessels, South Africa General Manager at Binance
Stablecoins are no longer a niche instrument tucked away in crypto trading desks. They have evolved into critical financial infrastructure that is reshaping how money moves, how value is stored, and how digital assets create real economic value today. Increasingly, this evolution is unfolding at the intersection of digital assets and the traditional banking system. Nowhere is this transformation more visible than across Africa, where stablecoins are being adopted not out of speculative interest, but out of practical necessity.
The conversation around digital assets often starts with volatility. Yet real innovation has come from addressing volatility head-on. Stablecoins, which are typically anchored to major fiat currencies, have unlocked utility by offering reliability, speed, and accessibility. This stability is essential not only for consumers and businesses, but also for financial institutions that require predictability to support payments, liquidity management, and settlement.
Across Africa, stablecoins are powering payments, remittances, savings, and trade. In many cases, this activity runs alongside existing banking rails rather than outside of them. According to recent data, Sub-Saharan Africa processed more than $54 billion in stablecoin transactions between July 2023 and June 2024, accounting for 43 percent of all crypto activity in the region. These figures tell a story not of speculative trading, but of real-world usage at scale.
What is notable is who these users are. They are not traditional crypto enthusiasts tracking price charts. They are small business owners managing cash flow, freelancers receiving cross-border payments, families receiving remittances, and individuals seeking protection against currency volatility. Many still rely on banks for savings, lending, and compliance, while using stablecoins to overcome the challenges of high fees, slow settlements, or limited access to foreign currencies.
This shift matters because innovation in digital assets is no longer about chasing the next breakthrough technology alone. It is about building systems that people trust and can use every day. Stablecoins sit at the centre of this evolution. They increasingly act as a bridge between regulated banking systems and decentralised technology, combining the familiarity of fiat money with the efficiency of blockchain-based settlement. This enables users and institutions to move value globally with minimal friction while maintaining confidence in pricing.
As stablecoins become embedded in daily financial activity, they also enable broader innovation in the digital asset ecosystem. Decentralised finance platforms, blockchain-based lending, and tokenised assets all rely on stable units of account to function effectively. Banks are beginning to explore how these technologies can complement traditional products, from cross-border settlement to treasury operations, rather than compete with them.
Across Africa, necessity has been the catalyst for adoption. Many markets face high transaction costs, delayed settlement times, and limited access to dollar liquidity. Stablecoins offer an alternative that works across borders and outside traditional banking hours. Used alongside banks, they can enhance financial access without requiring individuals or institutions to abandon established systems.
Importantly, the rise of stablecoins is also reshaping how we think about trust in digital assets. Trust is not built through technology alone, but through transparency, compliance, and education. As global regulatory frameworks evolve, stablecoins are increasingly viewed through the same risk and governance lens as other financial instruments, creating space for deeper collaboration between banks and digital asset platforms.
Stablecoins are also changing how Africa participates in the global economy. By lowering barriers to entry, they allow individuals and businesses to transact globally without needing complex or costly intermediaries, while still supporting bank-led oversight, compliance, and settlement where required. This is particularly powerful for exporters, remote workers, and entrepreneurs who operate beyond national borders but remain constrained by local financial infrastructure.
Looking ahead, stablecoins will continue to drive innovation well beyond payments. The impact of stablecoins in Africa is a reminder that meaningful innovation starts with solving real problems. Africa has not adopted stablecoins to follow trends, but to build resilience and opportunity. As adoption accelerates, collaboration between banks, digital asset platforms, and policymakers will be critical to unlocking sustainable growth.
Stablecoins are not simply another chapter in the crypto narrative. They are evolving into the backbone of modern digital assets by strengthening, rather than bypassing existing financial systems. For Africa, this moment represents more than technological progress. It is an opportunity to build financial systems that are resilient, inclusive, and future-ready.
Now is the time to move from experimentation to responsible scale, ensuring stablecoins are used to unlock participation, trust, and long-term economic empowerment across the continent.




