Nigeria vs Indonesia · Real-time payment systems compared
| Capability | NIP | QRIS |
|---|---|---|
| QR Code Payments | ◐ | ✓ |
| Wallet Support | — | ◐ |
| 24/7 Availability | ✓ | ✓ |
| Cross-Border | — | ◐ |
| ISO 20022 | — | — |
| Request to Pay | — | — |
| Open API | ◐ | ◐ |
| Alias/Proxy | — | — |
Nigeria's NIBSS Instant Payment system is the backbone of real-time interbank transfers in Africa's largest economy, operated by Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS). NIP enables 24/7 instant account-to-account transfers across all banks and fintech providers via account number, phone number, or BVN (Bank Verification Number). With over 200M people and a booming fintech ecosystem (OPay, PalmPay, Kuda, Moniepoint), NIP processes billions of transactions annually and is central to Nigeria's cashless policy. It also powers popular consumer apps and the NQR (NIBSS QR) standard for merchant payments.
Indonesia's national QR code standard (Quick Response Code Indonesian Standard) that unifies QR payments across banks, e-wallets (GoPay, OVO, Dana, ShopeePay), and the BI-FAST rail into a single interoperable code. Unlike most payment systems that are a single rail, QRIS is a multi-rail standard — merchants display one QR code that consumers can scan with any participating app, with settlement happening through whichever rail the consumer's app uses. Mandated by Bank Indonesia, QRIS processed 34B+ transactions in 2024 and is central to Indonesia's financial inclusion strategy for its 17,000-island archipelago.