Peer to peer exchange is not new. It is older than money itself and is how trade began. Long before banks, apps, or even money itself, people simply exchanged what they had for what they needed. In many ways, what we now call peer to peer remittance is just a modern version of that same idea, adapted for a global, digital world.
Today, remittances are one of the largest financial flows worldwide, yet they are still widely underestimated. In 2024 alone, global remittance flows reached about 905 billion dollars, with 685 billion going to low and middle income countries. Africa accounted for nearly 100 billion of that, and Nigeria received close to 20 billion. In several African countries, remittances are as important as or even more important than foreign investment and aid, playing a major role in both national economies and everyday household stability.
But these official numbers do not tell the whole story as a sizable share of remittance activity happens informally and never gets recorded. This hidden layer is exactly where peer to peer remittance is already thriving.
In major corridors like the UK and Canada to Nigeria or Africa, people naturally find ways to match their needs. Someone abroad who wants to send money connects with someone else who needs foreign currency. Instead of moving money across borders, transactions are settled within each country, and funds do not actually travel internationally. They are simply balanced between participants.
This system is already operating at scale. Even if only a small portion of Africa’s 100 billion dollar remittance market flows through these informal channels, it shows that this is not a niche behavior. It is a widely used and efficient system that has simply lacked visibility and formal structure. That same lack of transparency is also what makes it harder for regulators to track, despite improvements in formal payment systems.
Traditional remittance models work like pipelines, where growth is measured by how much money moves through controlled channels. But peer to peer remittance, especially in digital form, works more like a marketplace.
As more people join, liquidity improves. As more corridors open up, matching becomes faster and smoother. Over time, the system starts to optimize itself, learning from transaction data and becoming more efficient. Growth is not forced through infrastructure. It happens naturally through network effects.
This is why peer to peer platforms can scale so quickly. Instead of physically transferring money across borders, they focus on matching supply and demand across locations, unlocking a more efficient global flow of funds.

Pricing is another major advantage. Traditional systems rely on intermediaries/platforms who set exchange rates and build in margins. In a peer to peer model, users agree on rates themselves, creating a more competitive and transparent environment that benefits everyone involved.
It is also no surprise that many established players are hesitant to adopt this approach. It directly reduces the margins they depend on. Peer to peer remittance shifts value away from intermediaries and puts it back into the hands of users, which makes it inherently disruptive.
Historically, trust has been the biggest limitation. Informal systems rely heavily on personal networks, which makes them hard to scale. Expanding beyond those circles requires a new kind of trust infrastructure. This includes identity verification, compliance, dispute resolution, and reliable liquidity management.
That is now starting to change. Advances in digital identity, real time payment systems, growing diaspora networks, and AI are all helping to build trust directly into platforms. People are becoming more comfortable relying on system level trust instead of personal connections.
This points to where remittance is headed next. It is not just about faster transfers anymore, especially in places like Nigeria, where speed is already becoming standard. The real shift is toward smarter matching. Platforms that can efficiently connect users while maintaining transparency and regulatory oversight will unlock the next wave of growth.
For those who still need instant transactions, hybrid models are emerging as a practical solution. They offer immediate settlement alongside better rates than traditional providers.

At Voye, this evolution is already in motion. By focusing on key corridors like the UK, Canada, Nigeria, and Kenya, and building infrastructure around visibility, tracking, and trust, the company is bringing structure to a system that has long operated in the shadows.
“Peer-to-peer remittance is the natural evolution of how value has always moved, now supercharged by digital trust and network effects. At Voye, we’re formalizing this hidden powerhouse, building the infrastructure for seamless, scalable P2P flows that empower users directly.”
– Dapo Olatinsu, COO, Cede
Instead of trying to compete within outdated frameworks, Voye is rethinking remittance based on how people actually move value today.
About Voye
Voye is pioneering peer-to-peer remittance infrastructure that formalizes informal value flows, powered by Cede Technologies’ capabilities in global payments and settlement, treasury-as-a-service, risk and exposure management, and working capital & trade finance, as its retail-facing solution. The platform allows money to move from Canada and the UK into Nigeria and Kenya, enabling diaspora users to send money home efficiently-without traditional intermediaries.
Website – voyeapp.com
IG – https://www.instagram.com/voyeapp/
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/voyeapp/
















