Sub-Saharan Africa received over $205 billion in on-chain value in the twelve months through June 2025, and one of crypto’s oldest infrastructure companies is moving aggressively to capture the next wave of that growth.
The Nigeria expansion that began in early 2025 produced a 700% increase in brokerage transaction volume. That number justified moving further into West Africa. Ghana was not a cold start. Before the official March 9 launch, active users on Blockchain.com’s platform in Ghana had already grown 140% organically over the prior year, with transaction volumes up 80% without any formal market entry effort. The demand existed before the company arrived to serve it.
That pre-launch growth pattern matters because it indicates pull rather than push. Blockchain.com is not attempting to create demand in a skeptical market. It is formalizing infrastructure around demand that already exists and has been growing without institutional support.
The most actively traded assets across the West African region are USDT, Bitcoin, and Tron. That list connects directly to data from other sources published this week. Tron appeared in Revolut’s volume breakdown at 23% of total crypto transactions and in the Presto Research active user rankings as the dominant blockchain globally for ten consecutive months. The common thread across all three datasets is stablecoin transfers. Ghanaian users trading USDT on Tron are doing the same thing that Latin American users, Southeast Asian users, and European neobank customers are doing: moving dollars cheaply across a network that does not require a bank account.
Bitcoin in this context functions primarily as a savings vehicle and inflation hedge, consistent with the broader African adoption pattern driven by currency volatility. Ghana’s cedi has experienced significant depreciation pressure in recent years. Holding BTC or USDT provides access to dollar-denominated value storage that local banking infrastructure does not offer at equivalent cost or speed.
Blockchain.com’s primary infrastructure goal for Ghana is integration with the local mobile money ecosystem. Mobile money is not a niche product in Ghana. It is the dominant payment infrastructure for daily transactions across the population, with penetration levels that exceed traditional banking by a significant margin. MTN Mobile Money and Vodafone Cash are embedded in how Ghanaians pay for goods, receive wages, and transfer money between family members.
Connecting crypto on-ramps and off-ramps directly to mobile money wallets removes the friction that has historically limited crypto adoption to the technically sophisticated. A user who can convert mobile money airtime into USDT and back without touching a bank account has access to dollar-denominated financial tools that formal banking has not provided. That is the same distribution logic that Nubank and Mercado Pago applied in Brazil, and that Revolut applied across Europe.
Sub-Saharan Africa is the third-fastest-growing crypto market globally. $205 billion in on-chain value across twelve months is a figure that commands infrastructure investment. Blockchain.com establishing local compliance representation and hiring regional teams rather than managing Ghana remotely signals a longer-term commitment than a typical market entry announcement implies.
The use cases driving adoption across the region, remittances, currency hedging, and cross-border settlement, are not speculative. They are financial necessities being met by crypto infrastructure because traditional alternatives are too slow, too expensive, or unavailable entirely.
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