Africa’s food economy is vast, vibrant, and central to daily life. Across Nigeria’s cities and towns, restaurants, cafés, bukas, and roadside kitchens feed millions while driving one of the continent’s most active sectors. Increasingly, Nigerian technology companies are stepping in to modernise this ecosystem, building tools that help small businesses operate more efficiently and access financial services.
In a move that reflects this shift, Nigerian fintech company Moniepoint Inc. has acquired restaurant management startup Orda Africa, positioning itself to expand into Africa’s fast-growing $50 billion food service industry.
The acquisition will integrate Orda’s cloud-based restaurant software into Moniepoint’s business management platform, Moniebook, allowing restaurants and food vendors to manage orders, payments, inventory, and accounting from a single system. For businesses that still rely on manual records or disconnected tools, the integration promises a more efficient way to manage daily operations.
The deal also highlights a broader evolution within Africa’s fintech sector. Companies once focused solely on payments are increasingly building platforms that support the full operational needs of small businesses, combining transactions, management tools, and access to credit.
For Tosin Eniolorunda, Moniepoint’s co-founder and group chief executive officer, the food sector represents one of the continent’s most active yet underserved industries.
“The food industry is a major source of jobs and daily survival for many Africans,” Eniolorunda said, noting that many businesses still operate with manual systems and fragmented processes.
Restaurants are particularly attractive to fintech firms because they generate high-frequency transactions, rely on steady supply chains, and often require working capital to sustain daily operations.
The sector itself is expanding quickly as urban populations grow and dining habits evolve, Africa’s restaurant industry continues to scale. Nigeria alone is projected to see its restaurant market reach about $19.3 billion by 2030, growing at an annual rate of more than 11 percent.
Founded in 2020, Orda Africa built software specifically for small and independent restaurants, many of which previously operated without digital infrastructure. Its platform helps businesses track orders, manage kitchen workflows, and monitor stock levels, replacing manual systems with organised digital processes.
According to Guy Futi, Orda’s chief executive officer, the partnership with Moniepoint allows the company to combine operational expertise with financial infrastructure.
“To truly transform the industry, we needed to connect that expertise with comprehensive financial infrastructure,” Futi said, adding that customers will continue using the platform while gaining access to expanded services.
The acquisition also reflects Moniepoint’s rapid rise within Nigeria’s fintech ecosystem. Founded in 2015 by Eniolorunda and Felix Ike, the company says it now serves more than 20 million businesses and individuals and processes over $250 billion in digital payment transactions annually. It has also become one of Nigeria’s largest merchant acquirers, powering a significant share of point-of-sale transactions nationwide.
By integrating Orda’s technology, Moniepoint will gain deeper insight into restaurant operations , including sales patterns, peak demand periods, and inventory cycles. Analysts say such data could support sector-specific lending, helping restaurants access financing based on real operational records.
The deal may also intensify competition in Africa’s growing food-tech ecosystem, where startups are developing solutions for restaurant management, delivery services, and supply chains. Yet much of the continent’s independent food sector still operates offline, highlighting the scale of opportunity that remains.
For Moniepoint, the acquisition forms part of a broader strategy: building a comprehensive financial ecosystem around African small businesses, rather than focusing only on payments.
For millions of food entrepreneurs across Nigeria and the wider continent, from neighbourhood kitchens to established restaurant operators, the convergence of technology and finance could unlock new tools and funding needed to power the next phase of growth in Africa’s food economy.