Sumsub, a global tech company that allows businesses to verify users, transactions, manage cases, as well as fight digital fraud from a single dashboard, on Monday announced the launch of its Non-Document Verification (NDV) in Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya, and Ghana.
Peter Sever, Co-founder and Chief Strategy Officer at Sumsub who made the announcement in a statement, said the launching of the full-cycle verification platform would help clients reach over 350 million potential users.
“We aim to pioneer document-free verification in Africa, helping companies stay compliant with KYC/AML regulations, eliminate identity fraud, and effortlessly onboard users,” he said in the statement.
Sever noted that the Non-Doc Verification is tailored to businesses across both regulated and non-regulated sectors including crypto, fintech, gaming, e-commerce, and mobility, as well as to social media platforms and telecommunications providers.
“With user verification done in under 5 seconds, Sumsub’s clients have seen pass rates increase by 44%, reaching 96.5% on average.
“Sumsub is the first player in Africa to provide businesses with a truly global, single-platform KYC/AML solution, combining user onboarding, compliance, and anti-fraud.
“Depending on the identification reference provided, users may also be asked to go through Sumsub’s facial recognition check, which matches the user’s biometric data with a photo image stored in official records. This lightning-fast verification process is made possible by government and banking sources used by Sumsub,” he added.
According to Sumsub Identity Fraud Report 2023, the rate of identity fraud in Ghana more than doubled from 2022 to 2023 (from 0.64% to 1.74% of all verification checks), while Kenya and Nigeria were among the top-3 countries in MEA with the highest fraud rates, at 3.20% and 2.95% respectively.
The region has also seen an average annual increase in AI-driven deepfakes of 450%.
Leading the pack are South Africa, rising by 1200%, and Nigeria, rising by 700%—with both countries accounting for 31% of all attacks in the region, the report had said.