He Built GoPay. Kenya Moved.
Alfred Gitau Mwaura didn’t just build a payment company. He built the infrastructure Kenya’s informal economy had been silently begging for — and then he plugged it into everything.
You have lived in Nairobi long enough to know the matatu conductor’s hand — always open, always waiting, always extracting a little more than the agreed fare. Cash disappears into pockets. Owners never see the full day’s collection. Drivers are blamed. Passengers are overcharged. And the cycle turns again, tomorrow, on the same route, in the same minibus, with the same problem nobody has been able to fix.
Alfred Gitau Mwaura looked at that cycle and did what builders do. He didn’t write a report. He didn’t wait for government policy. He built GoPay.
Through Gopay Enterprises, Alfred created a payments and mobility platform designed from the ground up for Kenya’s real economy — not a polished import from Silicon Valley, but a solution forged in the specific, stubborn complexity of Nairobi traffic, matatu SACCOs, informal merchants, and the daily hustle of millions of Kenyans who move the city and never get credit for it.
Kenya’s public transport sector moves over Ksh 400 billion a year — almost entirely in cash. That cash leaks at every single touchpoint. Conductors pocket portions. Owners can’t reconcile daily collections. Drivers are accused of theft they may not have committed. SACCOs operate blind. And the passenger? They just want a fair fare and a seat.
Previous attempts at cashless matatu systems — BebaPay, My1963, Abiria Card — failed because they were built for the system, not for the people inside it. Alfred understood the difference. GoPay was built operator-first, driver-first, community-first.
Kenya doesn’t need another payment app. It needs a connected ecosystem — where the matatu, the merchant, the farmer, and the barista all move money the same way. That’s what we’re building.— Alfred Gitau Mwaura · Founder, Gopay Enterprises
Here is what makes Alfred Gitau Mwaura unusual among fintech founders: he is not building in isolation. GoPay is not a standalone app looking for a market. It is one layer in a deliberately designed ecosystem that Alfred has been assembling for years — Kenya Coffee School, Barista Mtaani, Alfix Sub-Organic, the ACI™ framework, Good Trade Certification — each initiative solving a different problem for the same people.
The matatu driver who uses GoPay to collect fares cashlessly? They’re the same community whose youth Alfred is training at Barista Mtaani. The SACCO treasurer who finally has real-time visibility into daily collections? Their data feeds into the kind of financial inclusion story that unlocks credit, insurance, and formal banking for people who have been invisible to those systems for decades.
Alfred doesn’t think in products. He thinks in ecosystems. And GoPay is the payments spine that runs through all of it — the infrastructure layer that makes everything else legible, traceable, and fundable.
Smarter Cities.
Frictionless Money.
African-Built.
GoPay’s mission is to build the financial rails that Africa’s informal economy deserves — transparent, real-time, and owned by the communities it serves. From the matatu to the market stall, from Nairobi to the continent.
You’ve heard the phrase “Africa leapfrogging.” Usually it’s said by people in conference rooms who’ve never ridden a matatu at 7am on Thika Road. Alfred Gitau Mwaura has. And that’s exactly why GoPay works where others haven’t — because it was designed from inside the chaos, not dropped onto it from above.
The conductor who stops skimming because there’s nothing to skim. The SACCO that finally has accounts it can audit. The passenger who books a seat from their phone and boards without argument. The barista entrepreneur who accepts payment on a GoPay wallet at a weekend pop-up in Githurai. These are not features. They are lives changing.
Alfred Gitau Mwaura built GoPay not because payments were a good market. He built it because broken systems are an insult to the people who depend on them — and he had the skills, the vision, and frankly the stubbornness to do something about it.
The Future
Moves Cashless.
Alfred Gitau Mwaura and Gopay Enterprises are building the payment infrastructure Africa’s informal economy deserves. The ride has already started.
