Stitch, one of South Africa’s largest payments fintech startups, has partnered with Capitec Bank, the country’s largest bank by customer base,  to allow customers to automate recurring payments for services like Netflix, deliveries, and bills, using Variable Recurring Payments (VRP), a smarter form of direct debit.Stitch, one of South Africa’s largest payments fintech startups, has partnered with Capitec Bank, the country’s largest bank by customer base,  to allow customers to automate recurring payments for services like Netflix, deliveries, and bills, using Variable Recurring Payments (VRP), a smarter form of direct debit.

Capitec VRP lets South Africans make recurring payments directly from bank

2025/12/04 21:48

Stitch, one of South Africa’s largest payments fintech startups, has partnered with Capitec Bank, the country’s largest retail bank by customer base,  to allow customers to automate recurring payments for services like Netflix, deliveries, and bills, using Variable Recurring Payments (VRP), a smarter form of direct debit. 

“With Capitec Pay variable and recurring payments now available across our partner network and live with Stitch, clients gain more control and visibility over their ongoing payment commitments,” said Chris Zietsman, Executive Head of Capitec Business Payments. “We’re expanding Capitec Pay’s everyday uses, like grocery checkout and delivery – while keeping rates affordable for merchants.”

Capitac Pay VRP is one of South Africa’s first large‑scale, API‑driven recurring payment options, letting banked consumers pay for digital services directly from their accounts and reducing reliance on risky cash‑on‑delivery models.

Instead of manually approving a payment every time a bill is due or an order is placed, customers only need to set up Capitec Pay once. Users authorise a specific merchant, such as a delivery app, and define a maximum spending limit. Once established, future payments within that limit occur automatically in the background without requiring further action.

Commercial banks like FNB, Absa, and Standard Bank use the traditional DebiCheck system for recurring payments. While that system works similarly, Capitec is the first to use this specific new technology. 

VRPs are expected to spread as open banking matures in South Africa, with PayShap, Capitec Pay, and fintechs like Stitch highlighted as early building blocks. For now, Capitec is the notable bank with a public VRP‑style API product, while other banks are more focused on DebiCheck improvements and broader open‑banking roadmaps rather than named “VRP” offerings.

“We’re excited to work with the Capitec team to bring this important solution to the South African market,” said Junaid Dadan, President and Co-founder at Stitch. “VRP gives Capitec customers more control over the way they make recurring payments, and helps businesses to streamline collections – especially where there are complex requirements. This will have a major impact on the market, and we’re excited to offer this to all our enterprise clients in South Africa.”

Read: South Africans ditch cash and cards for digital payments, new report shows

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Tokenization Key to Modernizing US Markets

Tokenization Key to Modernizing US Markets

The post Tokenization Key to Modernizing US Markets appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Strategy: SEC Chair Paul Atkins designates “tokenization” as the industrial strategy to modernize US capital markets, launching the “Project Crypto” initiative. The Rules: A new “Token Taxonomy” will legally separate Digital Commodities, Collectibles, and Tools from Securities, ending the “regulation by enforcement” era. The Privacy: The SEC’s Dec 15 roundtable will feature Zcash founder Zooko Wilcox, signaling a potential policy thaw on privacy-preserving infrastructure. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Paul Atkins has formally aligned the agency’s mission with the digital asset revolution, declaring “tokenization” as the critical alpha required to modernize America’s aging capital markets infrastructure.  In a definitive signal to Wall Street, Atkins outlined the next phase of “Project Crypto,” a comprehensive regulatory overhaul designed to integrate blockchain rails into the federal securities system. Related: U.S. SEC Signals Privacy Enhancement in Tokenization of Securities U.S. SEC Chair Touts Tokenization as the Needed Element for Modernizing Capital Markets According to Chair Atkins, tokenization is the alpha needed to modernize the capital markets in the United States. As such, Chair Atkins noted that the SEC’s Project Crypto will focus on issuing clarity under the existing rules as Congress awaits passing the CLARITY  Act. Moreover, the SEC Chair believes that major global banks and brokers will adopt tokenization of real-world assets (RWA) in less than 10 years. Currently, the SEC is working closely with the sister agency Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) to catalyze the mainstream adoption of tokenized assets. Chair Atkins stated that tokenization of capital markets provides certainty and transparency in the securities industry. From a regulatory perspective, Chair Atkins stated that tokenized securities are still securities and thus bound by the existing securities laws. However, Chair Atkins stated that digital collectibles, commodities, and tools are not securities, thus not bound by the 1940s Howey test. As such,…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/08 18:35