Sendwave Launches New Banking Product Targeting Kenyans In The US

By Joseph-Albert Kuuire 3 Min Read

Sendwave, a digital remittance company, has launched a new banking product that allows users to earn interest and pay reduced fees on international remittances.

Details

The new product dubbed Sendwave Pay was recently launched by the company. The new solution provides existing Sendwave users access to an FDIC-insured bank account with an accompanying debit card. This makes Sendwave the only major remittance provider with such an offering in the US.

Digging Deeper

Sendwave Pay, which is available to users via the Sendwave app on iOS and Android, has the following features:

  • A bank account with no hidden account creation, maintenance or minimum balance fees
  • Access to up to 0.4% improvement on exchange rates and up to 25% savings on transaction fees on remittances to Kenya, Ghana, Tanzania, Uganda, Nigeria, and Liberia when using the funds in their accounts.
  • A Sendwave Pay debit card to use on every day transactions;
  • Reimbursements for international transaction fees when using their Sendwave Pay debit card outside of the US;
  • Earn up to 0.51% APY on the money held in their Sendwave Pay account

For migrants, opening a bank account is considered an important step to establishing themselves and helps to achieve financial autonomy. Sendwave Pay is the first neobank offering within Zepz, the Group powering global remittance brands Sendwave and WorldRemit. Zepz intends to continually invest in migrant-focused financial offerings around the world, including Kenya.

What They’re Saying

Eric Huynh, Product Lead, Sendwave Pay, Zepz said: “The way that people use and access money has drastically changed over the last decade. We created Sendwave Pay to better meet the needs of our customers, who are dynamically considering how they manage their money both for themselves and for loved ones abroad.”

By The Numbers

Zepz’s launch of Sendwave Pay comes amid an economic slowdown and higher borrowing costs in the US, which is the leading source of remittances to Kenya. Kenyans living in the US sent a total of $2.33 billion back home in 2022, representing more than half of the total $4.02 billion of diaspora remittances in 2022, according to data from the Central Bank of Kenya. (CBK).


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TAGGED:
Joseph-Albert Kuuire is the creator, editor, and journalist at Tech Labari. Email: joseph@techlabari.com Twitter: @jakuuire
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