FaidiHR predicts the future of payroll in Africa - Report


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Africa’s human resources management
automation is set for a revolution as the payroll function is becoming a
strategic growth driver.
Latest data from “The Future of Payroll in
Africa” by FaidiHR indicates that businesses are seeking systems that enhance
productivity, enrich employee experiences, and facilitate compliance with
evolving and complex regulations.
Africa's payroll is at a crossroads,"
asserts Peter Muchemi, CEO of FaidiHR, an East Africa market leader in payroll
and HR solutions. "Payroll has been a cost center for the past several
decades. However, visionary companies are now looking at payroll as a gateway
to financial inclusion, talent retention, and operational efficiency."
He said governments all over the continent
of Africa are increasingly instituting stricter tax regimes and statutory
compliance. From Kenya's SHIF and NSSF reforms to Nigeria's evolving pension
legislation, compliance is now unavoidable. Businesses are seeking cloud-based
platforms to avoid costly penalties and navigate the complex regulatory
landscape.
"Instead of looking for a payslip
maker, our clients require a compliance partner," Muchemi states. "Automated
payroll ensures that all deductions—ranging from tax to social security
contributions—are accurate, timely, and transparent."
According to the report, released in August
2025, African payroll is also changing as a vehicle for financial empowerment.
Salary loans, savings plans, and insurance offerings are increasingly being
incorporated into payroll systems. This trend has significant implications for
SMEs, which might not be able to accommodate traditional employee benefits.
"With payroll, employers can now
enable their workers to access cheap loans, save, and insure themselves without
the red tape of traditional banking," Muchemi says. "It's a win-win:
workers get financial security, and companies improve retention."
The report also states that as the world
keeps pace with mobile money penetration, payroll infrastructure in Africa is
trending towards mobile-first solutions. From casual tea plantation workers in
Kericho to rural developers in Nairobi for a South African business, the future
is not bordered.
“We’re already seeing demand for
cross-border payroll that integrates with mobile wallets and multi-currency
systems,” Muchemi explains. “The future of payroll in Africa is about
inclusion—paying people wherever they are, in a way they can access and trust.”
Payroll analytics and artificial
intelligence will drive the next payroll innovation wave. Predictive
payroll—looking ahead to anticipate the need for cash, tax forecasting, and
even compliance risk signaling—will become the standard.
"Payroll information is one of the
richest, but uncapped datasets for African enterprises," Muchemi asserts.
"We are shifting from reactive payroll to predictive payroll, where
employers can plan more effectively, employees receive their pay faster, and
governments receive revenue sooner."
The pay-as-you-grow future in Africa is not
about technology, the report states,
replacing people—it's about enabling them. Companies that adopt this
change early on will not only stay out of compliance trouble but also be ahead
of the curve in terms of attracting and retaining talent.
“FaidiHR's mission is simple: to make
payroll simpler so African companies can focus on growth," Muchemi
outlines. "Payroll was previously about paying individuals—it's now about
powering Africa's workforce of the future."
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