Embrace Lightning Network Payments
With load-shedding easing and mobile money integration rising, local merchants report 40%+ transaction growth in Q4 2025–Q1 2026
CCN Editor – George April
CAPE TOWN:- In the rolling farmlands and coastal towns of South Africa’s Western Cape, a quiet shift is underway.
Small businesses from Malmesbury wine estates to Paarl cafés and Stellenbosch tech startups, are increasingly accepting Bitcoin via the Lightning Network, bypassing traditional card fees and slow bank settlements.
Local payment processor Luno reported a 42% quarter-on-quarter increase in Lightning-powered merchant transactions in the province during late 2025, according to figures shared with CCN. The growth coincides with reduced load-shedding blackouts (Eskom’s Stage 0 status holding steady since November) and rising mobile penetration, allowing more users to run always-on Lightning nodes on affordable Android devices.
“For many of our clients, Bitcoin isn’t speculation anymore, it’s daily cash flow,” said Johannesburg-based fintech consultant Thandi Ngcobo, who advises Western Cape SMEs. “When a tourist pays for a R1,200 bottle of Chenin Blanc with sats over Lightning, the merchant receives it instantly and can spend it the same day on suppliers. Compare that to waiting three days for a card payout minus 3 – 4% fees.”
Several high-profile Western



