Cross-border payments reached $182 trillion in total flow in 2024, yet the average cost of sending money internationally remains 4.3% of the transaction value — more than double the UN Sustainable Development Goal target of 2%, according to the World Bank. The gap between the volume of cross-border flows and the inefficiency of processing them represents one of the largest addressable opportunities in financial technology. Fintech companies building next-generation cross-border payment infrastructure are targeting this gap with technology that reduces costs, speeds settlement, and improves transparency.
Why Cross-Border Payments Remain Expensive and Slow
The traditional cross-border payment system relies on correspondent banking — a network of bilateral relationships between banks in different countries. A payment from the US to Nigeria might pass through three or four intermediary banks, each adding fees and processing time. According to SWIFT, the average cross-border payment takes 2-5 days to settle and involves 2.7 intermediaries. Each intermediary adds cost and introduces opacity — the sender often cannot track the payment or predict the final amount the recipient will receive.

The inefficiency persists because of structural factors: different countries operate different payment systems with different standards, currencies must be converted at each step, compliance checks (anti-money laundering, sanctions screening) are duplicated by each intermediary, and legacy technology at correspondent banks processes transactions in batches rather than in real time. According to McKinsey, 60% of the cost of cross-border payments comes from compliance and operational overhead rather than the actual movement of money.
How Fintech Is Solving Cross-Border Payment Challenges
Fintech companies are attacking cross-border payment inefficiency through several approaches. Wise (formerly TransferWise) pioneered the peer-to-peer model, matching payments in opposite directions to avoid international transfers entirely. Ripple and other blockchain-based platforms use distributed ledger technology to settle cross-border payments in seconds rather than days. Fintech startups like Airwallex, Thunes, and Nium are building modern payment infrastructure that connects local payment networks directly, bypassing the correspondent banking system.
According to Forrester Research, fintech-processed cross-border payments now represent 18% of total volume, up from 7% in 2020. The growth rate — approximately 30% annually — suggests that fintech will handle the majority of cross-border payments within a decade. The cost advantage is the primary driver: fintech cross-border payments average 1.2% in total fees, compared to 4.3% through traditional banking channels.
Real-time cross-border settlement is the next frontier. The G20’s cross-border payments roadmap, supported by the Bank for International Settlements, has set targets for faster, cheaper, and more transparent international payments by 2027. Several digital banking platforms already offer near-instant cross-border transfers in specific corridors, using pre-funded accounts in destination countries to deliver funds immediately while the actual settlement occurs in the background.
The Role of Emerging Technologies
Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) may become the most significant cross-border payment technology. The BIS Innovation Hub’s Project mBridge, connecting the central banks of China, Hong Kong, Thailand, and the UAE, demonstrated that CBDC-to-CBDC transfers can settle cross-border payments in seconds at near-zero cost. According to the BIS, 134 countries representing 98% of global GDP are now exploring or piloting CBDCs, with cross-border interoperability as a primary use case.
Stablecoin-based cross-border payments are growing rapidly in parallel. Circle’s USDC and Tether’s USDT are increasingly used for B2B cross-border settlement, particularly in emerging markets where traditional banking infrastructure is limited. According to industry estimates, stablecoin-settled cross-border payments exceeded $2.5 trillion in 2024.
For venture investors, cross-border payment technology remains a high-priority category. The market is massive ($182 trillion in annual flows), the incumbent infrastructure is demonstrably inefficient, and the technology solutions are proven. The fintech companies that build the payment rails connecting the world’s local payment networks into a seamless global system will capture value proportional to the trillions of dollars flowing through their infrastructure.







