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Africa / Tanzania · Updated 11 March 2026

Tanzania's neobanks,
by BoT licence class.

Tanzanian retail finance sits across three Bank of Tanzania licence classes with materially different Deposit Insurance Board (DIB) outcomes. CRDB Bank PLC, NMB Bank PLC, and NBC are BoT-supervised commercial banks under the Banking and Financial Institutions Act 2006 — DIB members at TZS 1,500,000 per depositor per institution under the 2018 Deposit Insurance Regulations. M-Pesa Tanzania (Vodacom Tanzania) and Tigo Pesa are BoT-licensed mobile-money operators under the National Payment Systems Act 2015 — funds held in trust accounts at custodian banks, NOT DIB-covered. Read the licence on the receiving entity, not the brand on the channel.

3DIB-covered banks in the cohort
TZS 1.5MDIB ceiling (~USD 600)
2 MMOsM-Pesa TZ + Tigo Pesa (NOT DIB)
Last verified11 March 2026
01 — The licence taxonomy

Three BoT licence classes,
two outcomes — bank deposit or trust-account claim.

Tanzanian retail banking and mobile money sit across three Bank of Tanzania-supervised licence classes with materially different DIB outcomes. Commercial banks chartered under the Banking and Financial Institutions Act 2006 — CRDB Bank PLC, NMB Bank PLC, NBC, Stanbic Tanzania, Exim Bank Tanzania, Diamond Trust Bank — carry DIB cover up to TZS 1,500,000 per depositor per institution under the Banking and Financial Institutions (Deposit Insurance) Regulations 2018. Microfinance banks chartered under the BoT microfinance regime are DIB-eligible if DIB members; the licence is narrower than a full commercial-bank charter. Mobile-money operators licensed under the National Payment Systems Act 2015 — M-Pesa Tanzania (Vodacom Tanzania), Tigo Pesa (Airtel-affiliated post merger), Airtel Money, HaloPesa, TTCL Pesa — are NOT banks; balances are held in segregated trust accounts at custodian commercial banks but do not carry DIB cover at the user level. The licence on the receiving entity decides the protection.

CB · Commercial Bank
CRDB · NMB · NBCDIB TZS 1.5M
BAFIA 2006BoT supervision
Receiving entity = chartered bankDirect depositor relationship
MFB · Microfinance Bank
BoT microfinance regimeDIB if member
Narrower licence scopeLimited product surface
Verify DIB membershipdib.go.tz
MMO · Mobile Money Operator
M-Pesa TZ · Tigo Pesa · Airtel MoneyNPS Act 2015
NOT DIBNo deposit cover
Trust-account safeguardingCreditor claim, not deposit
Proteção de depósitos AFRICA-NG
Sistema
NDIC
Tecto
NGN 5,000,000
Regulador
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)

A Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) cobre até 5 milhões de NGN por depositante por Deposit Money Bank autorizado pela CBN, e até 2 milhões de NGN por depositante por Microfinance Bank / Primary Mortgage Bank. A cobertura dos PSB (Payment Service Bank) segue o tecto dos Deposit Money Banks, mas verifique a classe de licença — as carteiras fintech raramente são autorizadas como PSB.

Fonte primária: https://ndic.gov.ng/

03 — DIB: who's covered, who isn't

The lowest deposit-insurance ceiling
of any country pillar on this site.

The Deposit Insurance Board of Tanzania covers eligible deposits up to TZS 1,500,000 per depositor per member institution under the Banking and Financial Institutions (Deposit Insurance) Regulations 2018. Membership is statutory for commercial banks chartered under the Banking and Financial Institutions Act 2006 — CRDB Bank PLC, NMB Bank PLC, NBC, Stanbic Tanzania, Exim Bank Tanzania, Diamond Trust Bank — and is DIB-eligible for microfinance banks if they are DIB members. The ceiling applies across all balances at the same institution combined: current account, savings, fixed deposits, and channel-linked sub-accounts are netted before the TZS 1,500,000 cover is calculated.

The headline ceiling is exceptionally low in dollar terms. At a USD/TZS rate near 2,500 the TZS 1,500,000 cover is roughly USD 600 — the lowest deposit-insurance cap of any country pillar on this site, materially below FDIC ($250,000 USD), FSCS (£85,000 GBP), the EU DGSD harmonised ceiling (€100,000 EUR), Kenya KDIC (KES 500,000, ~USD 3,800), Nigeria NDIC (NGN 5,000,000, ~USD 3,200 at recent rates), or Philippines PDIC (PHP 500,000, ~USD 8,800). Real-USD value erodes further with TZS depreciation against the dollar — the ceiling is anchored to a domestic shilling figure under the 2018 regulations and is not indexed to a USD benchmark, so a depositor verifying the cap on dib.go.tz today is reading a smaller real-dollar number than a depositor verifying it in 2018. Depositors with balances above TZS 1,500,000 should split funds across multiple DIB-member commercial banks (CRDB + NMB + NBC + Stanbic Tanzania + Exim Bank Tanzania + Diamond Trust Bank) to layer cover institution-by-institution.

Mobile-money wallets are not deposit-insured. M-Pesa Tanzania (Vodacom Tanzania PLC, DSE: VODA), Tigo Pesa, Airtel Money, HaloPesa, and TTCL Pesa are BoT-licensed mobile-money operators under the National Payment Systems Act 2015 — not banks. Customer float is held in segregated trust accounts at custodian commercial banks; the trust ring-fences the float from each operator's corporate balance sheet, but the user holds a creditor claim against the trust, not a chartered-bank deposit. DIB cover does NOT apply. The Tanzania Instant Payment System (TIPS), launched by BoT in 2022, routes real-time transfers across wallets and bank accounts on a single interoperable rail, but TIPS does not change the licence class of the receiving entity or the DIB outcome — a transfer from CRDB to M-Pesa Tanzania over TIPS still ends in a Vodacom mobile-money wallet outside the DIB envelope.

See bot.go.tz for the BoT licensee register, dib.go.tz for the current DIB ceiling and member-institution list, and the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE) for CRDB Bank PLC, NMB Bank PLC, and Vodacom Tanzania PLC investor disclosures. Reporting from The Citizen, Daily News, EastAfrican, and Reuters covers the structural development of TIPS and the mobile-money licensing framework.

04 — M-Pesa Tanzania vs M-Pesa Kenya

Same brand, different operating entity, different regulator.

Tanzania's mobile-money market mirrors Kenya's structurally — a dominant M-Pesa rail alongside a smaller competitor — but the operating entities and the regulators are separate. M-Pesa Kenya is operated by Safaricom PLC (NSE: SCOM) under a Central Bank of Kenya mobile-money licence issued under the National Payment System Act 2011. M-Pesa Tanzania is operated by Vodacom Tanzania PLC (DSE: VODA) under a Bank of Tanzania mobile-money licence issued under the National Payment Systems Act 2015. Vodacom Group (South Africa) is the controlling shareholder of Vodacom Tanzania and a substantial shareholder in Safaricom Kenya, which is why the M-Pesa brand and the underlying product family travel across both markets — but the operating entity, the national regulator, the applicable national-payments statute, and the deposit-protection regime are all separate. A Tanzanian M-Pesa wallet is governed by BoT rules and sits outside the DIB envelope; a Kenyan M-Pesa wallet is governed by CBK rules and sits outside the KDIC envelope. The structural conclusion is identical (both are MMO licences, neither is deposit-insured), but a depositor crossing the border cannot assume that documentation, complaints procedures, or supervisory contacts transfer from one regime to the other. The brand is the same; the licence is not.

05 — Methodology

How this ranking is built.

Each candidate is scored on the licence class of the receiving entity (commercial-bank product vs microfinance-bank product vs mobile-money operator), DIB membership status and ceiling, parent backing (DSE-listed Tanzanian PLC vs foreign-affiliated subsidiary), product surface (app + USSD retail surface vs channel-only wallet), and published deposit-product terms. The ranking is editorial and explicitly excludes affiliate compensation as a ranking input — none of the rows on this page carry an affiliate relationship at the time of writing. Licence-status references and DIB ceiling statements were verified against the Bank of Tanzania licensee register at bot.go.tz, the Deposit Insurance Board insured-institution list at dib.go.tz, the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE) listings for CRDB Bank PLC, NMB Bank PLC, and Vodacom Tanzania PLC, and reporting from Reuters, The Citizen, Daily News, and EastAfrican. Where BoT circulars or DIB ceiling schedules shift the underlying numbers, the relevant prose calls it out and points readers at the BoT and DIB primary sources for current status. We do not reproduce BoT-confidential supervisory ratings.

06 — Verdict

For DIB cover, route into a DSE-listed commercial bank.

The Tanzanian retail pattern has a clean structural answer once the licence-class filter is applied. For balances where statutory cover is load-bearing, the rational pick is a commercial-bank deposit at a DIB-member institution — CRDB Bank PLC, NMB Bank PLC, or NBC on a BAFIA 2006 commercial-bank licence, with Stanbic Tanzania, Exim Bank Tanzania, and Diamond Trust Bank as the additional DIB-member options for spreading balances above the per-institution ceiling. All three of CRDB, NMB, and NBC sit inside the same DIB envelope at TZS 1,500,000 per depositor per institution, and balances above the per-institution cap should be split across multiple DIB-member commercial banks to layer cover. The headline TZS 1,500,000 ceiling is the lowest of any country pillar on this site in absolute USD terms (~USD 600), so layering across institutions is operationally significant for any saver above the domestic median balance. M-Pesa Tanzania and Tigo Pesa are dominant for peer-to-peer transfers, merchant payments, and the daily store-of-value flows that define the Tanzanian financial median — but the licence on the wallet is a BoT mobile-money authorisation under the National Payment Systems Act 2015, not a bank charter, and the balance is not DIB-covered. Use the wallet for what it is best at, and route savings balances into a chartered DIB-member bank when the protection ceiling matters.