How RwandaCash became a pan-European remittance platform — without a single additional license.
Rwanda's most trusted diaspora money transfer operator. Fifteen years of community expertise. Now powered by Belmoney's regulated infrastructure across all 27 EU member states. This is the RaaS thesis in action.
When we built Belmoney, we had a clear conviction: community-native remittance operators should never have to choose between staying close to the people they serve and operating at European scale. RwandaCash — our newest client — is the clearest proof yet that they don't have to.
RwandaCash has spent fifteen years building something no neobank or generalist MTO can replicate: deep, earned trust inside the Rwandan diaspora. Ramadhani Nsengiyumva and his team know the corridor, the language, the cultural weight of sending money home. What they lacked was the regulatory and technological backbone to serve that community across the entire EU — without spending years and millions pursuing individual licenses in every member state.
That is the precise gap our Remittance-as-a-Service model was designed to close.
Through a single API integration, RwandaCash now runs on top of Belmoney's PSD2-licensed infrastructure. They've gained Eurozone-wide collection capabilities, an automated AML/KYC compliance layer, and real-time FX conversion — all while keeping their brand, their community relationships, and their commercial model fully intact. The result: a community-rooted operator transformed into a fully EU-enabled digital remittance platform, overnight.
The stakes are real. Remittances reached a record $554 million in Rwanda in 2023, representing roughly 3.6% of the country's GDP. These flows sustain households, fund education, and support small businesses — but high transfer costs continue to suppress their impact. Every basis point shaved off the cost of a transfer is capital that reaches the people it was always meant for.
record — 2023
from remittances
to East Africa (Q1 '25)
For us, this is more than a commercial milestone. It reflects three convictions that define how we build.
01 / Compliance shouldn't be a barrier to inclusion.
The average cost of sending $200 to East Africa stood at 9.9% in Q1 2025 — more than three times the UN Sustainable Development Goal target of 3%. Those percentage points aren't abstractions. They're school fees, medication, a month's rent for a family in Kigali. Our job is to give operators like RwandaCash the infrastructure they need to drive those costs down — fast.
02 / Local expertise is irreplaceable — and we refuse to compete with it.
We don't own the customer relationship. We don't dilute fifteen years of community trust. We build the rails; our clients bring the community. "Zero competition with our clients" isn't a marketing line — it's architecture. RwandaCash retains its brand and its relationships. We provide the licensed infrastructure that makes EU-wide scale possible.
03 / Embedded infrastructure is the next phase of cross-border finance.
The remittance operators that win this decade won't be the ones holding the most licenses. They'll be the ones who serve their communities with the deepest understanding — and scale that service across borders fastest. Our job is to make that scale inevitable, for operators who've already done the hardest work of building trust.
With Belmoney's regulated infrastructure underneath it, RwandaCash is now positioned to serve the Rwandan diaspora across all EU member states — faster, more securely, and at lower cost than ever before. The model demonstrates how compliant, API-first infrastructure can help community-focused fintechs scale while meaningfully improving global remittance flows.
This is what RaaS was built for. And RwandaCash is only the beginning.