Why infrastructure readiness will define SARB Authorisation

  • Solutions
18/03/2026
Contact us

Beyond Compliance: Why infrastructure readiness will define SARB authorisation for South African Payment Service Providers, e-money issuers, and fintech operators

Fintech innovation across Africa has grown rapidly, expanding digital services and financial inclusion. As the ecosystem matures, the regulatory framework is evolving alongside it. The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) is strengthening requirements for Payment Service Providers, e-money issuers, and fintech operators to ensure a secure and resilient payment ecosystem. The draft Authorisation Framework introduces a structured two-tier e-money licensing regime Tier 1 (above R5 million average monthly transaction value, R8 million minimum capital) and Tier 2 (below R5 million, R5 million minimum capital) and, critically, for the first time enables non-banks to hold client funds and operate payment activities without mandatory bank sponsorship.

Today, authorisation goes beyond capital and documentation. Institutions must demonstrate secure, scalable, and auditable payment infrastructure meaning compliance increasingly starts with technology architecture, which for many fintechs becomes a key readiness challenge.

In practice, many fintech operators do not build this infrastructure internally. Instead, they rely on regulated-grade payment infrastructure platforms that provide switching, reconciliation, risk management, and scheme connectivity aligned with central bank requirements.

The Real Pain Points in SARB Authorisation

Fragmented infrastructure

Many fintech platforms grow through a patchwork of systems:

  • One provider for switching
  • Another for fraud monitoring
  • Separate reconciliation tools
  • External KYC engines
  • Manual dispute workflows

While this approach allows companies to launch quickly, it creates significant challenges when preparing for regulatory review. Regulators require end-to-end traceability of transactions, risks, and controls. When systems are fragmented, producing this evidence becomes complex and time-consuming often delaying the authorisation process. Across the African payments ecosystem, BIS analysis indicates that standard fragmentation can add 20–50% to per-transaction processing costs a structural burden that compounds directly when preparing a regulatory-grade audit trail.

Operational capability must be proven

Under the SARB framework, fintech operators must demonstrate that they can operate safely within the National Payment System.

This includes capabilities such as:

  • Real-time reconciliation
  • Secure switching infrastructure
  • Auditable transaction records
  • Robust fraud and AML decisioning
  • Consumer protection and dispute workflows

These are not simply compliance policies. They must be embedded within the operational technology stack.

Interoperability with the Payment Ecosystem

Participation in the National Payment System also requires technical interoperability with banks, schemes, and settlement networks. Institutions must support standards such as:

  • ISO 8583
  • ISO 20022
  • Nexo
  • Scheme integrations

Developing and maintaining this level of interoperability is complex, and many fintech operators discover this gap only when preparing for licensing. South Africa was one of the first countries on the continent to adopt ISO 20022 at policy level, yet the regional picture remains hybrid: of 21 assessed African payment systems (SIIPS 2023), 10 operate on ISO 20022, 6 remain on ISO 8583, and 5 use proprietary formats. Regional platforms such as PAPSS (now connecting 19 central banks and 150+ commercial banks) and TCIB (serving 16 SADC countries) are built exclusively on ISO 20022 making standards interoperability a commercial imperative, not merely a compliance checkbox.

Risk-Based Compliance Expectations

Regulators aligned with FICA (Financial Intelligence Centre Act ) frameworks increasingly expect adaptive AML and fraud monitoring, rather than static rule-based systems. Institutions must implement capabilities such as:

  • Machine-learning risk models
  • Configurable risk policies
  • Investigation workflows
  • Full audit trails of compliance decisions

Few fintechs design their initial infrastructure with this level of sophistication. The stakes are tangible: South Africa’s FATF grey-listing experience demonstrated the direct commercial cost of AML deficiencies, with terminated correspondent banking relationships forcing an estimated 70% of SADC cross-border remittances into informal channels. Regulators have drawn the lesson and built it into the framework’s expectations.

The Infrastructure Gap

As a result, many fintechs encounter a common pattern: build fast, scale, apply for licensing then discover infrastructure gaps. At that stage, rebuilding core payment systems can take 12–24 months, delaying regulatory approval and market expansion. This is why more institutions are shifting toward regulatory-ready infrastructure platforms. Each point-to-point integration with a regional payment scheme typically costs between $200,000 and $500,000 when built from a fragmented stack — before a single application is submitted to SARB.

How the SPARK Platform Tackles These Challenges

The SPARK Payment Platform, developed by MS Solutions Group, was designed to close this infrastructure gap by embedding regulatory capabilities directly into payment operations. Rather than adding compliance as an external layer, SPARK integrates it within the platform architecture. The platform is proven at institutional scale — 250+ clients, 26+ countries, 200,000+ terminals in active operation — with African deployments including Ecobank, Coris Bank, and ABC Bank, and independently validated by five PCI certifications covering the full payment stack.

 

End-to-End Payment Processing

SPARK provides full-stack payment infrastructure supporting switching, issuing, and scheme connectivity, with native support for major payment standards

Built-in Security and Certification

The platform maintains multiple PCI certifications, providing documented security controls that strengthen regulatory authorisation dossiers.

Automated Reconciliation and Fund Safeguarding

SPARK supports real-time reconciliation across ATM, POS, and mobile channels with complete transaction audit trails required for safeguarding client funds.

AI-Driven Fraud & Risk Management

Through the SPARK Trust module,
institutions can deploy adaptive fraud detection and configurable risk scoring aligned with modern AML frameworks.

Integrated Consumer Protection Workflows

Dispute management, refunds, and strong customer authentication are built directly into the issuing and acceptance layers of the platform.

 

Infrastructure as a Competitive Advantage

For fintech leaders, regulatory readiness is no longer simply a compliance obligation it is an infrastructure advantage. Institutions that embed compliance into their payment architecture benefit from:

  • Faster regulatory approvals
  • Stronger partner and regulator confidence
  • Easier expansion into new markets
  • Improved operational resilience

In a regulated financial ecosystem, the most scalable fintechs will not necessarily be those that move the fastest. They will be those that build infrastructure regulators trust. The window is open: bank account penetration across Sub-Saharan Africa is projected to rise from 48% to 68% by 2029, adding tens of millions of first-time account holders to the ecosystem precisely the cohort the SARB framework is designed to protect and serve.

If you are preparing for SARB authorisation or evaluating your payment infrastructure readiness, our experts can help assess your current architecture and identify the fastest path to regulatory compliance.

Download our latest SPARK Platform overview sheet and get in touch with our experts to discuss how SPARK can support your SARB readiness journey.

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

You’ll also like

    • Press Release
    11/02/2026

    Among Top-Tier PCI-Certified Payment Software Platforms

    • Solutions
    11/02/2026

    SoftPOS: The Next-Gen Acceptance

    • Events
    09/02/2026

    Exhibiting at Seamless Dubai, 22 – 24 September 2026 – Schedule a meeting with our experts