Digital Payments & Fintech · Angola
Digital Payments & Fintech - Angola
Angola operates a clear, in-force licensing regime for digital payments and e-money. Law 40/20 (LSPA) defines payment service providers (PSPs), payment institutions and electronic money institutions, with the BNA empowered to grant and revoke licences and set capital, governance, AML and consumer-protection requirements. The national interbank infrastructure (Multicaixa, run by EMIS) provides instant transfers and QR payments, and the BNA actively enforces the regime against unlicensed e-money wallet operators. No dedicated open-banking framework or specific BNPL regime exists yet.
Law no. 40/20 of 16 December (LSPA) sets the legal framework for the supervision, regulation, management and operation of Angola's payment system, modernising the prior regime to reflect transaction volumes and new financial products.
The Banco Nacional de Angola (BNA) supervises and regulates the payment system and holds exclusive authority to grant and revoke licences for payment service providers, payment institutions and operators.
Electronic money institutions and PSPs must be licensed by the BNA, meeting capital, operational-capacity, governance, risk-management, AML and data-protection requirements set out in the Financial Institutions Basic Law, Aviso 07/2017 (payment services) and Aviso 07/2018 (non-banking financial institutions).
The BNA has publicly warned that electronic money wallets require a licence and that the activity is reserved for authorised PSPs, after noting a rise in operators offering e-money without proper authorisation; the BNA has also authorised a set of companies to issue electronic money.
EMIS operates the Multicaixa national interbank network (the only interbank ATM/POS system) and core clearing and instant payment services, including the instant Transfer System, Direct Debit, Credit Transfer and Multicaixa Express, with QR and instant transfers expanding strongly through 2025.
Angola has no dedicated open-banking mandate or specific buy-now-pay-later regime; consumer credit and any BNPL offerings fall under general financial-institution and credit rules rather than a tailored framework, while the BNA and partners (e.g. IFC) work on broader fintech enabling-environment reforms.
Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/25/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →