Orange Money Group plans to roll out virtual Visa cards across Africa and the Middle East, including the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). In a joint statement, Orange and Visa, a global leader in digital payments, said they had signed an agreement to support the expansion.
The virtual Visa card will be accessible via the Maxit application, which currently has 45 million active customers. Users will be able to instantly generate a rechargeable card from their Orange Money account, usable for online payments on local and international websites. A physical version of the card is also planned and will be made available later at authorized Orange Money points of sale.
In the DRC, Orange Money had already launched an Orange Money Visa card in June 2021 in partnership with UBA. Linked to the Orange Money account, it allowed funds to move between the card and the user’s mobile wallet. It remains unclear whether the initiative gained traction, but the current project builds on similar rollouts in Botswana, Madagascar, Jordan, and Ivory Coast. The goal is to “provide millions of users with a simple, secure, and internationally recognized payment solution.”
According to Thierry Millet, CEO of Orange Money Group, the launch of virtual cards for international payments marks the first phase of a broader agreement designed to expand Orange Money’s acceptance on e-commerce platforms and at local merchants.
The partnership comes as Visa strengthens its presence in the DRC through several collaborations with local banks and fintech companies. Last September, Visa signed an agreement with Onafriq, a pan-African digital payments network, to interconnect VisaPay with the country’s main mobile money wallets, including M-Pesa, Airtel Money, and Orange Money. The interoperability enables Visa accounts to be funded directly from mobile money wallets and facilitates electronic payments.
In the DRC, the value of digital transactions is expected to reach $3.85 billion in 2025, driven by an estimated average annual growth rate of 19%, according to the GSMA. Visa aims to capture part of this growth through the gradual rollout of its solutions, including the VisaPay application launched last September.
The Congolese mobile money market continues to grow strongly. According to data from the Regulatory Authority for Post and Telecommunications of Congo (ARPTC), Orange Money accounted for 6.611 million active accounts in the second quarter, out of a total of 31.16 million, representing a 19.3% increase from the previous quarter. The operator held a 21.22% market share, behind Vodacom’s M-Pesa (49.37%), Airtel Money (29.26%), and Africell (0.15%).
Ronsard Luabeya









