Credit Direct is turning the Nigerian kitchen into a BNPL use case. The infrastructure behind it is the real story

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Credit Direct Is Turning the Nigerian Kitchen Into a BNPL Use Case

The kitchen appliance category does not sound like fertile ground for fintech innovation. But look at the numbers underneath it, and the logic becomes clear quickly. Average transaction values between ₦80,000 and ₦300,000. High purchase intent driven by genuine household need. Strong price sensitivity at every income level. And a customer who, in the absence of a payment option that fits their cash flow, will either buy down to a cheaper product or walk away entirely.

Credit Direct Checkout, the BNPL arm of CBN-licensed Credit Direct Finance Company Limited, has moved on that category directly. Through integrations with Electromart, Sims Nigeria, and Eight Sage, customers can now acquire kitchen appliances ranging from gas cookers to chest freezers by paying 25% upfront and spreading the balance over up to six months, with access to up to ₦1,000,000 in credit.

The product infrastructure makes this possible without a complex e-commerce setup on the merchant’s side. Credit Direct Checkout supports in-store, website, and WhatsApp transactions. The WhatsApp channel is not an afterthought. A meaningful share of Nigerian retail commerce moves through messaging, and a BNPL solution that does not accommodate that channel is solving for a version of Nigerian commerce that does not reflect actual buying behaviour. A merchant can close a fully structured, credit-backed BNPL transaction over WhatsApp without a payment gateway, a shopping cart, or a developer.

Credit Direct Is Turning the Nigerian Kitchen Into a BNPL Use Case.

The settlement flow is worth understanding precisely. A customer selects a product and chooses BNPL at checkout. Credit Direct approves the transaction against the customer’s existing credit limit. The merchant receives payout within 24 to 48 hours. The customer repays in structured instalments. The merchant carries zero default risk at any point in that sequence.

What the kitchen appliance campaign also surfaces is the ecosystem play that Credit Direct has been building. Merchant payouts land in a Credit Direct Business wallet that earns returns of up to 15% per annum. The merchant who routes settlement funds through the wallet before deploying them for inventory or operations is not just accepting BNPL. They are running a treasury function on their float, automatically, without a separate product or decision required.

The consumer-facing entry point is also deliberately frictionless. Credit eligibility is assessable in under five minutes at www.creditdirect.ng/know-your-limit, with no branch visit required. Onboarding needs a BVN, NIN, and an active ATM card. For the mainstream Nigerian working adult with a smartphone and a bank account, the barrier to first use is low by design.

The BNPL category in Nigeria is moving fast. The market grew at a CAGR of 25.9% between 2022 and 2025, and Jumia’s move to embed instalment options at checkout in 2024 confirmed that the infrastructure is migrating from a standalone fintech product to an expected retail feature. Merchants who want to explore listing on the platform can start at www.creditdirect.ng/credit-direct-checkout.

The kitchen is just the current category. The underlying infrastructure is built for anything where a Nigerian consumer has a clear desire and a cash flow gap between now and the ability to pay in full.

Read Also: eSIM: All you need to know and how to onboard in Nigeria


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