Orange Money vs Wave: fees, reach, and how a business accepts both

Orange Money vs Wave comes down to fees versus reach, and Wave's flat 1% pricing forced Orange Money to cut Senegal transfer fees by roughly 80%.
Wave built its name on flat 1% transfers with free deposits and withdrawals, and Orange Money answered by dropping its own prices. But for a business the useful answer is not which wallet wins. It is that your customers use both, so the practical move is accepting Orange Money and Wave through one licensed API rather than juggling two separate wallet accounts.
I've spent years helping merchants in emerging markets get paid, and this is the pattern I keep coming back to. At Boldrails we are a licensed principal provider, and we acquire and settle both rails into a single account for merchants across francophone West Africa.
- Wave charges a flat 1% on transfers with free deposits and withdrawals, and it reports a cap on the per-transfer fee; this simple structure is why it grew so fast in Senegal.
- Orange Money's international transfer send fee is around 1.5% on the corridors it publishes, with withdrawals free on some of them; its domestic Senegal pricing was realigned downward after Wave arrived.
- Wave's flat pricing forced Orange Money to cut Senegal transfer fees by roughly 80%, and a 5,000 FCFA withdrawal that once cost about 350 FCFA fell to about 25 FCFA (RFI, 2021).
- Orange held 48.3% of Côte d'Ivoire's mobile-money market as of March 2021 (ARTCI) and 55.03% of Senegal mobile subscribers as of 31 March 2021 (ARTP). That incumbency is what funds its agent and USSD reach.
- There is no free, direct Wave to Orange Money transfer; people route through third-party interoperability tools or cash out at an agent, while the BCEAO pushes UEMOA-wide mobile-money interoperability.
- Both are BCEAO-regulated e-money issuers that expose developer APIs, so a business can accept both (plus MTN MoMo and Moov Money in Côte d'Ivoire) through one licensed provider with a single settlement.
Orange Money vs Wave: which should you use in Senegal and Côte d'Ivoire?
Your buyers are split across the two wallets (and in Côte d'Ivoire across MTN MoMo and Moov Money too), so picking one rail means turning away paying customers at checkout.
That is the framing I find most consumer comparisons miss. Wave and Orange Money are the two dominant mobile money rails in Senegal and Côte d'Ivoire, and the interesting question for a merchant is not loyalty to one brand. It is coverage of both. Boldrails exists to make that a single integration instead of two. So below I take each rail on its own terms, fees, reach, safety, regulation, and then get to the part that matters if you are selling: how you accept them.
What are Wave and Orange Money?
They come from opposite directions: fintech versus telco. Wave entered Senegal in 2016 and Côte d'Ivoire in 2021, competing on that single flat fee. Orange Money launched years earlier and works over both USSD and an app.
Around this duopoly sit a few other players. Mixx by Yas (formerly Free Money) is the third Senegalese wallet; in Côte d'Ivoire, MTN MoMo and Moov Money hold real share alongside Wave and Orange Money; and Wave's group also runs Sendwave for diaspora inbound remittances, which matters if your customers receive money from abroad. On market position, Orange held 55.03% of Senegal mobile subscribers as of 31 March 2021 (ARTP) and 48.3% of Côte d'Ivoire's mobile-money market as of March 2021 (ARTCI). Wave, Orange Money, MTN MoMo and Moov Money are named here as comparison subjects only.
Orange Money vs Wave fees compared (send, deposit, withdrawal)
Fees are where most people make the call, so here is the head-to-head across the fee lines that actually differ. I couldn't find one published comparison that lines up fees, reach, the merchant API path and both Senegal and Côte d'Ivoire in one place, so I built that table myself. Wave's model is a single flat rate. Orange Money's varies by service and corridor, and Mixx by Yas sits close to Orange Money on structure.
| Fee line | Wave | Orange Money | Mixx by Yas |
|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic transfer (send) | Flat 1% | ~0.8% to 1% (approx, reported) | ~1% (approx, reported) |
| Send-fee cap | Reported ~5,000 FCFA (third-party estimate) | Reported ~4,500 FCFA (third-party estimate) | Not published |
| Deposit (cash-in) | Free | Free | Free |
| Withdrawal (cash-out) | Free | Free to reduced on some corridors | Reduced |
| International send | Via partners | ~1.5% send fee (published corridors) | Via partners |
| Bill payment (Senelec/Woyofal, SEN'EAU, Canal+) | Free to low | Free to low | Free to low |
| Airtime top-up | Supported | Supported | Supported |
Arranged from official rail fee pages and third-party comparisons. Caps and per-amount grids are third-party estimates; reconfirm current tariffs before you rely on a number.
The two markets differ, so read the table with that split in mind: in Senegal the practical choice is Wave, Orange Money and Mixx by Yas, while in Côte d'Ivoire a merchant needs all four (Wave, Orange Money, MTN MoMo and Moov Money). The flat, verifiable facts are these: Wave publishes a flat 1% transfer with free deposits and withdrawals, and Orange Money publishes an international send fee of around 1.5% with free withdrawals on some corridors. The per-transfer caps and the per-amount tranche grids that circulate on comparison blogs such as diodioglow's 2026 comparison are third-party estimates; treat them as indicative and reconfirm current tariffs before you rely on a number. The headline that survives all of this: Wave's flat pricing reset the market, and Orange Money followed it down.
Why did Orange Money cut its fees? The Wave price war
It cut Senegal transfer fees by roughly 80%: a 5,000 FCFA withdrawal that had cost about 350 FCFA dropped to about 25 FCFA, per RFI's 2021 coverage and corroborated across Senegalese press. Those figures are dated to 2021, so treat them as the moment the market shifted rather than today's exact tariff, and confirm live pricing before quoting it to a customer.
The fight was not only about price. It ran through the USSD layer too. Orange declined to let Wave run USSD codes on its network, which kept Wave app-only for years. Wave only secured its own USSD short code in June 2023, as cio-mag documented. Senegal's telecom regulator, the ARTP, later pushed a non-discrimination ruling on network access, part of a broader regulatory nudge toward open interoperability.
Coverage, agent network and USSD: which reaches further?
- Orange Money has the widest agent network, inherited from Sonatel, including deep rural coverage.
- It works over USSD (#144# in Senegal), so it runs on a basic feature phone with no internet, though it requires an Orange SIM.
- Wave's network is dense in cities and works on any SIM, but it is thinner in rural areas and can hit agent-liquidity gaps at the edges.
- Orange's subscriber base ( 55.03% of Senegal mobile subscribers as of 31 March 2021, ARTP) is what feeds that agent density.
- In Côte d'Ivoire, add MTN MoMo and Moov Money to the reach picture; no single wallet covers everyone.
For a business, reach translates directly into lost or captured sales. If your customers are rural or offline-first, Orange Money's USSD path matters; if they are urban and app-native, Wave's simplicity converts well. A merchant who accepts both stops guessing. You can see how each rail's coverage maps against payment methods and currencies in our full coverage matrix, and Côte d'Ivoire buyers often reach for Moov Money as a fourth option.
Can you transfer money between Wave and Orange Money?
The first route is third-party interoperability tools (apps such as change.sn, MultiChange and MyTouchPoint act as bridges); these are third-party services, not something either wallet operates, and their availability and fees vary by market. The second is the manual route: cash out at an agent, then deposit into the other wallet.
This is changing slowly. The BCEAO, the central bank for the UEMOA zone, is pushing full mobile-money interoperability across member states, and the BCEAO's interoperability program is the mechanism to watch. For a merchant, though, this whole problem disappears from the customer's side. When you accept both rails directly, your buyer pays from whichever wallet they already hold, and nobody has to convert Wave balance into Orange Money balance to check out. That is the business reframing of the region's single highest-volume search.
Accepting Orange Money and Wave as a business
For a business, the comparison stops being personal and becomes operational. When I sit down with a merchant, this is where the conversation always lands. Your customers split their spending across Wave, Orange Money, and in Côte d'Ivoire across MTN MoMo and Moov Money as well, so accepting only one rail costs you sales. Accept them all and a second problem appears: you now hold several wallet accounts, your cash is spread across separate apps, and end-of-day reconciliation turns into manual work across multiple dashboards.
Both rails do expose developer interfaces. Orange Money is reachable through Orange and Sonatel developer portals, and Wave publishes a business API. But integrating each one separately, handling its authentication, its webhooks and its settlement quirks, is real engineering work that multiplies with every rail you add. The alternative is a single licensed acquirer that already speaks all of them. That is what we built: instead of connecting you to partners, we acquire and settle the payments ourselves. You can accept Orange Money via API and Wave payments through one Boldrails integration, with the reconciliation collapsed into one ledger.
Which is safer, and how are Wave and Orange Money regulated?
Identity is verified through KYC tiers (the CNI biométrique CEDEAO identity card is the common document), and each wallet operates within a standard e-money balance ceiling set by BCEAO rules across the UEMOA zone; confirm the current ceiling and KYC tiers against the latest BCEAO instruction, since these are revised periodically. Orange Money adds a transfer-error cancellation feature that lets a sender reverse a mistaken transfer within a short window.
On the telecom side, the ARTP in Senegal and the ARTCI in Côte d'Ivoire regulate the network and USSD layer that these wallets ride on. These regulators are market context; Boldrails does not claim their authority. What we do say plainly is that we hold the necessary licences required in the markets we serve, which is what lets us acquire and settle these rails on your behalf. For a fuller view of what each rail supports market by market, our coverage matrix lays it out.
What this means
How Boldrails lets you accept both rails through one licensed API
We serve high-risk and high-volume merchants across francophone West Africa, and onboarding takes 3 to 14 days depending on your case. We acquire and settle the funds directly; we do not hand you off to a chain of partners. If you sell into more of the continent, the same principal-provider model extends so you can accept payments across Africa from one contract. We hold the necessary licences required in the markets we serve, and we settle both rails into one reconciled ledger so your finance team stops chasing balances across apps.
Accept Orange Money and Wave, settled into one account.