International remittances remain one of the most active areas in fintech. Demand continues to grow as more people work, study, or maintain family ties across borders. That demand creates room for both global incumbents and newer fintech infrastructure providers.
A recent development comes from the partnership between Western Union and Sasai Fintech, which launched a mobile app designed for consumers in South Africa. The goal is straightforward: make it easier for users in the country to send money abroad using a digital interface while still relying on a large global payout network.
Combining global reach with fintech infrastructure
The partnership blends two different capabilities.
Western Union brings a long-established international remittance network that connects more than 200 countries and territories. Sasai Fintech, a business within Cassava Technologies, provides the payments infrastructure and technology platform behind the service.
For users, the result is a mobile app that enables international transfers while connecting to Western Union’s existing global distribution system.
Recipients can receive funds in several ways. Transfers can arrive directly in bank accounts, be credited to digital wallets, or be collected in cash at physical locations around the world.
Users can fund transfers through debit cards, credit cards, bank transfers, or through Sasai’s retail network of agents. This hybrid setup reflects a practical reality in many remittance markets: digital interfaces are growing fast, but physical payout options still play an important role.
Why South Africa matters in remittances
South Africa represents a meaningful market for cross-border payments.
Internet access in the country is relatively high, and mobile connectivity is widespread. Many households rely on smartphones as their primary digital access point. That creates a natural environment for mobile financial services.
At the same time, international money transfers remain common. South Africans often send funds to relatives in other countries across the African continent, while some residents move money abroad for education, business, or family support.
These flows are not small. Personal remittances leaving the country exceeded one billion dollars in 2024. Numbers like this explain why companies continue building new services around cross-border transfers.
What the partnership signals for fintech
This launch reflects a broader pattern across the payments industry.
Large remittance networks still control global distribution and compliance infrastructure. Fintech platforms increasingly provide the technology layer that powers modern digital products.
Instead of replacing each other, the two sides often work together.
Western Union expands its digital reach through partnerships that add mobile interfaces and regional integrations. Sasai contributes its Payments-as-a-Service infrastructure, allowing new services to launch faster in specific markets.
The structure is fairly simple. One partner provides global rails. The other builds the digital experience and local connectivity around them.
Key takeaways for fintech startups
Several practical observations stand out from this launch.
- Partnerships between incumbents and fintech infrastructure providers remain one of the fastest ways to enter new markets.
- Cross-border payments continue attracting product innovation and competition.
- Local licensing, infrastructure, and regulatory knowledge often determine whether remittance products succeed.
- Even in mobile-first markets, physical payout networks still matter for global money movement.
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