Visa unlocks digital growth in Africa

GLOBAL payments leader Visa has launched its first-ever data centre on the African continent, marking a major milestone in the company’s digital expansion strategy. Located in Johannesburg, South Africa, the facility is set to boost digital payments infrastructure, accelerate innovation, and promote financial inclusion across the continent.

This new facility forms part of Visa’s $57million infrastructure plan in Africa and sits within a broader $1bn investment initiative announced in 2022. According to the company, the data centre will serve as a regional hub supporting growth in both established and emerging African markets.

While the exact size and coordinates of the centre have not been disclosed due to security considerations, Visa says the facility is now operational and fully integrated into its global processing network, VisaNet – which handles over 100 billion transactions annually across more than 200 countries.

Strategic investment to power African fintech growth

Michael Berner, Visa’s Country Manager for Southern and Eastern Africa, said the Johannesburg facility underlines the company’s long-term commitment to Africa’s digital future.

‘With this data centre, we believe we will bring even more innovations and more modern and sophisticated products to South Africa and the broader Africa,’ Berner said.

The launch comes at a time when Africa’s digital finance ecosystem is expanding rapidly. From mobile money to cross-border payments, demand for secure, high-speed infrastructure is intensifying.

South Africa’s Minister of Communications, Solly Malatsi, welcomed Visa’s move, calling it ‘a vote of confidence in South Africa as an investment destination’. He added that the facility will reduce dependency on offshore processing systems and help strengthen the continent’s financial sovereignty.

Bridging infrastructure gaps and inclusion divides

Visa’s investment in local infrastructure is widely seen as a catalyst for advancing digital inclusion. The Johannesburg data centre is expected to enhance transaction speed, data localisation, and cybersecurity for millions of African users.

According to a Mastercard-commissioned report by Genesis Analytics released in 2025, Africa’s digital payments economy could reach $1.5 trillion by 2030. Visa aims to capture and support that growth through advanced technologies, including generative AI-enabled transactions, real-time fraud protection, and smart routing.

The company’s Fintech Accelerator Programme and strategic partnerships with African banks and start-ups are part of a larger push to close inclusion gaps, particularly in regions where banking access remains limited.

Scaling Visa’s presence across the continent

While South Africa is the first to host a Visa data centre in Africa, the company is also expanding its reach into West and Central Africa – regions with high mobile penetration but underdeveloped digital infrastructure.

In these markets, small and medium-sized enterprises often struggle with poor access to payment platforms, high fees, and low trust in digital systems. Visa says its approach combines inclusive innovation, cybersecurity education, and localised services to overcome these barriers.

‘Visa continues to be very committed to the growth of the economy on the continent,’ Berner said. ‘Building this data centre – one of very few outside of our core locations in the US, UK, and Singapore – is evidence of that commitment.’

Africa central to Visa’s global vision

With its Johannesburg hub now live, Visa has taken a major step in anchoring its global infrastructure in Africa. The facility is designed to handle the unique needs of African markets, enabling faster, safer, and more reliable digital transactions.

As the company deepens its role in shaping Africa’s digital economy, it sees the data centre not only as a technical asset, but as a foundation for transformative economic impact.

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