A web-based invoicing software,Payant, has announced it will now support its users from Ghana, five months after it was launched.

The web-based invoicing app, which is one  of the fastest growing business app across Africa, announced on its  blog to allow Kenyans and Ghanaians to  enjoy the same easy, fast, instant and seamless payment experience.

Payant provides in addition to their wide range of products and services including the Mobile POS and Chatbots in their native currencies Ghanaian Cedis(₵) and Kenyan Shilling(ksh) respectively.

Since its launch in January, Payant has been pushing boundaries in the payment space, by adding features and extending its usefulness to its customers at no extra cost.

It has added the ability to act as a gateway across several technology stacks, launched its Payant Checkout app to replace Point Of Sale (POS) terminals at physical stores.


The Payant Bot, which is now available on Facebook Messenger, Skype and Slack, allows you create and manage your clients, send invoices and transfer funds instantly, from right within your chat window using conversational language across the three platforms mentioned above.

Payant’s other key features include: instant payments (i.e being credited the same instance a payment is made), and the ability to receive payments from anywhere in the world to your Naira account also instantly (huge deal if you are a regular on freelancing sites), and automated payment reminders. The ability to make frictionless one-off payments to pretty much anyone as well is also super cool.

Beyond invoicing, it is also a payment gateway for websites and mobile application developers to accept instant online payments from their users directly from their applications.

The Software was built by 20 year-old, Kaduna based developer, Aminu Bakori, famous for building his own OS – Cloudiora, and some other products including: Buzz – an offline, video and chat messenger and document sharing app, and  Friendstie Enterprise Management System.

By Fiifi Abdul Malik/ghanaguardian.com