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THE MISSING HALF OF THE DIGITAL ECONOMY – Why Women Still Lag in Digital Payments, and Why Closing the Gap Could Transform Africa’s Future

By HiPipo Money

Africa’s digital finance revolution has changed millions of lives.

Mobile money expanded access to financial services at a scale few imagined possible two decades ago. Entire communities entered the formal financial system for the first time through phones rather than bank branches. Small businesses digitised. Families sent money instantly. Governments distributed payments electronically. Rural economies became more financially connected.

Yet beneath this success story lies a quieter and more uncomfortable reality:

Women across much of Africa still remain less financially connected than men.

The gap is narrowing.

But it has not disappeared.

And the consequences extend far beyond banking.

Because when women are excluded from digital finance, entire economies lose productivity, resilience, entrepreneurship, household stability, and long-term growth potential.

The future of Africa’s digital economy may therefore depend heavily on one question:

Can the continent close the gender gap in digital payments fast enough?

For decades, women across many African societies faced structural barriers to formal financial participation.

In some communities, women lacked formal identification documents required to open accounts. In others, lower income levels reduced access to banking services designed primarily around salaried employment. Distance from financial institutions disproportionately affected women balancing caregiving responsibilities and informal work. Social norms sometimes limited independent financial decision-making. And digital access itself remained unequal, particularly around phone ownership and internet connectivity.

The result was layered exclusion.

Women were not excluded from economic activity.

Far from it.

Across Africa, women have long powered markets, agriculture, trade, informal commerce, and household financial systems. But much of this participation remained outside formal financial infrastructure.

Mobile money changed the trajectory dramatically.

By reducing reliance on traditional banking infrastructure, mobile financial services created more accessible entry points into the digital economy. Women no longer needed to travel long distances to banks or maintain large minimum balances. Transactions could happen through local agents embedded within communities. Small-value transactions became economically viable. Financial participation became more flexible and decentralised.

The impact was significant.

According to World Bank-related reporting, women’s account ownership in sub-Saharan Africa nearly doubled between 2011 and 2021, driven heavily by mobile money expansion.

That transformation represented one of the most important financial inclusion developments of the modern African economy.

But progress alone does not erase inequality.

Despite improvements, women in many African countries still lag men in:

  • digital account ownership,
  • smartphone access,
  • internet connectivity,
  • digital literacy,
  • transaction frequency,
  • merchant participation,
  • and access to broader financial services built on top of digital payments.

The reasons are deeply interconnected.

One of the largest barriers remains device access.

In many low-income households, phone ownership is still uneven. Men are often more likely to own smartphones, maintain independent connectivity, and control access to digital devices. Women may share phones within households or depend on relatives to transact digitally.

This creates a hidden layer of exclusion.

A woman may technically “have access” to digital finance while lacking full autonomy over how and when she uses it.

That distinction matters enormously.

True inclusion is not simply about whether an account exists.

It is about control.

Can women transact independently?
Can they save privately?
Can they manage businesses digitally?
Can they access digital marketplaces?
Can they build transaction histories?
Can they participate confidently without relying on intermediaries?

These questions increasingly define the deeper meaning of financial inclusion.

Digital literacy also remains a major challenge.

Many women entering digital finance ecosystems for the first time may face lower confidence navigating:

  • mobile applications,
  • PIN management,
  • fraud risks,
  • merchant payments,
  • digital savings,
  • or more advanced financial services.

This vulnerability can increase dependence on agents or relatives and heighten exposure to fraud and financial abuse.

In some cases, women intentionally avoid digital systems not because they reject technology, but because they fear making costly mistakes.

Trust therefore becomes central to adoption.

Financial systems designed without considering literacy, language, accessibility, or social realities risk reinforcing exclusion even when infrastructure exists.

This is why inclusive design matters.

Simple interfaces.
Local languages.
Voice-based systems.
Low-data solutions.
Strong customer support.
Consumer education.
Fraud awareness.
Community onboarding.

These are not secondary features.

They are inclusion infrastructure.

Another major issue is affordability.

Women are disproportionately represented in lower-income segments and informal economic sectors across many African economies. Transaction fees, smartphone costs, data expenses, and device replacement costs therefore affect women differently.

Even small costs can shape digital behaviour significantly.

A platform may technically be available while remaining economically impractical for frequent use.

This is particularly important because women often dominate precisely the sectors where small-value transactions are common:

  • informal trade,
  • market vending,
  • agriculture,
  • household commerce,
  • and microenterprise activity.

The economics of low-value digital payments therefore directly influence women’s participation.

This is one reason mobile money succeeded so strongly in Africa.

It made small transactions viable.

But sustaining meaningful inclusion requires continuing to reduce friction and costs for low-income users.

The rural dimension is equally important.

Women in rural communities often face overlapping barriers:

  • weaker network coverage,
  • fewer agents,
  • lower literacy,
  • lower phone ownership,
  • lower electricity access,
  • and less exposure to digital systems.

This creates compounded exclusion.

A rural woman farmer may simultaneously face:

  • infrastructure barriers,
  • affordability barriers,
  • social barriers,
  • and literacy barriers.

Closing the gender gap therefore cannot rely on one solution alone.

It requires ecosystem thinking.

The economic implications are enormous.

Women’s financial inclusion is directly connected to:

  • household resilience,
  • child welfare,
  • education outcomes,
  • business growth,
  • agricultural productivity,
  • healthcare access,
  • and poverty reduction.

Research consistently shows that when women control financial resources, broader household outcomes often improve significantly.

Digital finance therefore becomes more than a payment tool.

It becomes empowerment infrastructure.

A woman with direct control over digital income may gain:

  • greater financial independence,
  • stronger business participation,
  • safer savings mechanisms,
  • improved emergency resilience,
  • and increased economic visibility.

Transaction histories can eventually support:

  • credit access,
  • insurance participation,
  • merchant integration,
  • and formal economic inclusion.

This is where digital payments begin connecting to larger development outcomes.

Yet there is another important reality:

The future gender gap may increasingly become a data gap.

As economies digitize, those without strong digital transaction histories risk becoming economically invisible. Credit systems, lending models, merchant ecosystems, e-commerce platforms, and digital marketplaces increasingly rely on data generated through transactions.

If women transact less digitally, they may also generate fewer economic records.

That affects:

  • lending access,
  • business scalability,
  • platform participation,
  • and long-term economic mobility.

Closing the gender payments gap is therefore not only about fairness.

It is about future economic competitiveness.

Governments, FinTechs, telecom operators, regulators, and ecosystem institutions increasingly recognize this challenge.

Across Africa, initiatives are emerging around:

  • women-focused FinTech products,
  • digital literacy training,
  • affordable smartphones,
  • female agent networks,
  • women entrepreneurship platforms,
  • and gender-intentional financial services.

But scale remains critical.

The gender gap will not close through isolated pilots alone.

It requires structural commitment.

Policies that prioritize inclusion.
Products designed intentionally for women users.
Affordable connectivity.
Identity access.
Education systems supporting digital literacy.
Infrastructure investment.
Consumer protection.
And financial ecosystems designed around real-world social conditions rather than idealized assumptions.

This is where ecosystem platforms such as HiPipo and initiatives including the Digital Impact Awards Africa (DIAA), Women in FinTech, Include Everyone, and broader digital financial literacy movements become strategically important. Africa’s digital transformation conversation must continue placing women at the center rather than the margins of financial innovation.

Because the next phase of inclusion will not simply be about onboarding more users.

It will be about ensuring digital economies work meaningfully for everyone.

Especially those historically excluded.

Ultimately, the gender gap in digital payments is not merely a technology problem.

It is an economic participation problem.

A market vendor receiving payments independently.
A rural entrepreneur building transaction history.
A mother saving privately and securely.
A woman farmer accessing digital markets.
A young entrepreneur participating confidently in e-commerce.
A household becoming more financially resilient.

These are the real outcomes behind inclusion statistics.

Africa’s mobile money revolution already proved that financial infrastructure can evolve differently from the rest of the world.

Now the continent faces another historic opportunity:

To prove that digital finance can become not only widespread, but genuinely inclusive.

Because if Africa succeeds in closing the gender gap in digital payments, it will not simply expand financial access.

It will unlock one of the continent’s largest untapped economic growth engines.

The Elderly Man Who Finally Found Peace After Years of Fearful Nights

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A #100DaysofSolar Human Impact Story from Kasenge Nakawuka, Uganda

At 73 years old, Mpabonye Charles had grown used to surviving through difficult nights alone.

Inside his fragile grass-thatched home in Kasenge Nakawuka, darkness carried discomfort, fear, and exhaustion into every evening. Insects crawled across the floor and bit him through the night. Animals slipped into the house unseen. And with age making movement slower and more difficult, every sound inside the darkness felt unsettling.

For Charles, nighttime never brought proper rest.

It brought vigilance. Fear. And loneliness.

To cope, he relied on weak torches that failed constantly and drained the little money he had. Even after spending what he could afford on batteries and temporary light, the darkness always returned.

And with it came the feeling that old age had become a struggle instead of a time for peace.

Then Solar M7 arrived. And slowly, the nights inside Charles’ home began to change.

Today, reliable solar light fills the small grass-thatched house after sunset. The darkness that once hid insects and animals no longer controls the space around him. He now sees clearly, moves more confidently, and rests more peacefully through the night.

For the first time in many years, the home feels safe.

And for Charles, safety feels like dignity restored.

“Before Solar M7, nights were very difficult for me,” Charles shared during his interview. “I feared sleeping alone in darkness because of insects and animals entering the house. But now I feel peaceful and able to rest properly again.”

According to Doreen Nanfuka, elderly people living alone are among the most emotionally affected by energy poverty and unsafe nighttime conditions.

“When older people spend years sleeping in fear, it affects their health, emotional wellbeing, and sense of dignity,” Doreen explained. “Reliable light helps restore comfort, confidence, and peace inside the home.”

Innocent Kawooya says stories like Charles’ reveal the deeply human side of energy access initiatives.

“Reliable light is not only about visibility,” he noted. “It is about helping people feel safe, respected, and comfortable inside their own homes regardless of age or income.”

Today, nights inside Charles’ home no longer feel haunted by fear.

The darkness no longer steals his peace.

The fragile house no longer feels dangerous after sunset.

And in a place where old age once felt overwhelmed by discomfort and loneliness, Solar M7 is now helping restore something priceless.

Rest. Comfort. And dignity in the final chapters of life.

Watch the full story of Mpabonye Charles from Kasenge Nakawuka, Uganda across our platforms:

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THE AUTOMATIC ECONOMY – How Subscription Payments and Recurring Billing Are Quietly Reshaping Africa’s Digital Commerce Landscape

By HiPipo Money

For decades, much of Africa’s economy operated transaction by transaction.

Pay today. Buy today. Renew manually tomorrow.

Businesses depended heavily on one-time payments, physical collections, cash handling, and repeated customer follow-ups. Whether it was electricity, television, school fees, insurance, transport, internet bundles, or healthcare contributions, payment relationships were often fragmented and unpredictable.

This created instability for both businesses and consumers.

Companies struggled with inconsistent cash flow.
Customers missed renewal dates.
Service interruptions became common.
Administrative costs remained high.
And millions of low-income users operated without structured financial continuity.

Now, a quieter transformation is emerging across Africa’s digital economy:

The rise of recurring digital payments.

Subscription billing systems, automatic deductions, wallet-based recurring payments, standing mobile money instructions, embedded finance tools, and digital payment APIs are increasingly enabling businesses to collect payments continuously rather than manually.

The implications are far bigger than convenience.

Recurring payments are beginning to change how African businesses generate revenue, how households manage services, and how digital economies sustain long-term customer relationships.

In many ways, Africa is slowly transitioning from a transaction economy into a subscription economy.

Historically, recurring billing systems developed first in highly banked economies where customers maintained stable card relationships and formal banking histories. Monthly subscriptions for utilities, insurance, streaming platforms, and telecom services became normalized because payment infrastructure supported automated recurring collection.

Africa’s financial landscape evolved differently.

Large portions of the population remained:

  • unbanked,
  • underbanked,
  • cash-dependent,
  • or reliant on informal income cycles.

Many households earned daily or weekly income rather than monthly salaries. Card penetration remained limited across multiple markets. Formal direct debit systems developed slowly. And infrastructure fragmentation complicated automated billing.

Yet demand for recurring services continued growing.

Consumers increasingly needed:

  • pay-TV subscriptions,
  • internet services,
  • solar energy financing,
  • healthcare plans,
  • school systems,
  • digital platforms,
  • insurance coverage,
  • streaming services,
  • and telecom bundles.

The challenge was clear:

How do you build recurring payment systems in economies where income patterns and financial infrastructure differ significantly from traditional Western banking models?

Africa’s answer is increasingly being shaped by mobile money, FinTech infrastructure, and API-driven digital billing systems.

Mobile money changed the economics of recurring payments dramatically.

Instead of relying exclusively on cards or bank accounts, businesses could increasingly collect recurring payments directly through:

  • mobile wallets,
  • airtime-linked billing,
  • agent-assisted systems,
  • QR payments,
  • and digital payment gateways.

This created entirely new possibilities.

A household could pay for solar energy gradually through PAYGo systems.
A family could maintain television access through recurring mobile money deductions.
A small business could subscribe to software monthly.
A customer could maintain insurance coverage digitally.
A rural user could pay for internet bundles incrementally.

The key innovation was flexibility.

Africa’s subscription economy could not simply copy Western models built around fixed monthly card billing.

It needed systems designed around:

  • irregular incomes,
  • low-value transactions,
  • mobile-first infrastructure,
  • and hybrid digital-cash realities.

That adaptation became one of the continent’s biggest digital commerce innovations.

The energy sector provides one of the clearest examples.

PAYGo solar systems transformed energy access by allowing low-income households to purchase electricity gradually through recurring digital payments rather than large upfront costs. Instead of requiring customers to buy expensive solar systems immediately, providers enabled incremental payments through mobile money.

This changed the economics of energy inclusion completely.

Millions of households previously excluded from formal electricity access could now participate through:

  • small recurring payments,
  • digital wallet deductions,
  • and flexible financing models.

The significance extends beyond energy.

Recurring payment systems make expensive services economically accessible by spreading costs over time.

This model is increasingly shaping:

  • insurance,
  • healthcare,
  • education,
  • mobility,
  • agriculture,
  • and digital services.

Insurance is another major frontier.

Historically, insurance penetration across much of Africa remained low partly because premium collection systems were poorly aligned with informal income realities. Annual or large periodic premiums often excluded low-income populations.

Digital recurring payments are changing that equation.

Microinsurance models increasingly allow users to:

  • pay tiny recurring premiums,
  • maintain continuous coverage,
  • and manage policies digitally through phones.

This creates opportunities for:

  • health insurance,
  • agricultural insurance,
  • funeral cover,
  • device protection,
  • and climate resilience products.

The payment infrastructure itself becomes inclusion infrastructure.

Streaming and entertainment ecosystems are also accelerating recurring digital commerce.

Pay-TV providers, music platforms, gaming systems, streaming services, and creator economies increasingly depend on subscription billing models. As digital consumption grows across Africa, recurring payment infrastructure becomes essential for monetizing digital audiences sustainably.

Yet this sector also reveals a deeper transformation:

Businesses increasingly prefer predictable revenue over unpredictable transactions.

Recurring billing improves:

  • cash flow forecasting,
  • customer retention,
  • operational planning,
  • and financial stability.

For SMEs especially, predictable recurring income can significantly improve resilience.

A company with stable subscription revenue often survives shocks better than one relying entirely on inconsistent one-time sales.

This is why recurring payments are becoming strategically important not only for large corporations, but also for startups and SMEs.

FinTech infrastructure providers are playing a central role in this evolution.

Payment gateways, APIs, embedded finance systems, and digital billing platforms increasingly allow businesses to:

  • automate invoicing,
  • manage recurring collections,
  • integrate mobile money,
  • process standing instructions,
  • and monitor subscription analytics.

This dramatically lowers barriers for digital entrepreneurship.

A startup no longer needs to build complex billing infrastructure independently.
A healthcare platform can automate membership payments.
A software company can launch subscription pricing.
An education platform can collect recurring tuition digitally.

The infrastructure layer quietly enables entire new business models.

Yet despite rapid growth, major challenges remain.

One of the biggest is payment reliability.

Recurring billing depends heavily on:

  • stable connectivity,
  • reliable wallets,
  • sufficient balances,
  • interoperable systems,
  • and trusted infrastructure.

In low-income environments where incomes fluctuate significantly, failed recurring payments become common. Customers may lack sufficient wallet balances temporarily. Network interruptions may affect deductions. Wallet fragmentation may complicate collections.

This means recurring payment systems in Africa must remain flexible rather than rigid.

Rigid automated billing models designed for stable salaried economies may fail in highly informal markets.

The most successful African systems increasingly adapt around:

  • partial payments,
  • flexible billing windows,
  • hybrid payment methods,
  • and low-balance tolerance.

This flexibility is one of Africa’s most important digital commerce innovations.

Consumer trust also remains critical.

Recurring deductions can quickly become controversial if:

  • fees are unclear,
  • cancellations are difficult,
  • charges appear unexpectedly,
  • or customer support remains weak.

Low-income users are especially sensitive to unauthorized deductions because even small amounts matter significantly.

Transparent billing therefore becomes essential.

Customers must understand:

  • what they are paying for,
  • when deductions happen,
  • how to cancel,
  • and how disputes are resolved.

Without trust, recurring ecosystems weaken rapidly.

Regulation is also becoming increasingly important.

As subscription economies expand, regulators face new questions around:

  • consumer rights,
  • digital lending tied to subscriptions,
  • recurring authorization standards,
  • data privacy,
  • interoperability,
  • and financial transparency.

The line between FinTech, telecom, commerce, and utilities is increasingly blurring.

This convergence is reshaping the entire digital economy.

For HiPipo Money, the rise of recurring payments represents one of the most important shifts in Africa’s digital commerce future:

The move from transactional economies toward continuous digital relationships.

This aligns strongly with broader ecosystem conversations around:

  • financial inclusion,
  • digital infrastructure,
  • SME growth,
  • embedded finance,
  • energy access,
  • healthcare access,
  • and interoperable payment systems.

It also connects deeply to initiatives such as the Digital Impact Awards Africa (DIAA), Include Everyone, Women in FinTech, and broader innovation ecosystems championing affordable and inclusive digital services across the continent.

Because ultimately, recurring payments are not only about automated deductions.

They are about continuity.

A family maintaining electricity access.
A small business stabilising revenue.
A household accessing insurance affordably.
A student staying connected to learning platforms.
A creator monetising audiences sustainably.
A healthcare platform maintaining patient support.
A low-income customer accessing services once considered unreachable.

Most users may never think deeply about the infrastructure behind a monthly wallet deduction.

But quietly, recurring payment systems are changing how African economies function.

And in the emerging digital era, the businesses capable of building trusted recurring financial relationships may ultimately shape the future architecture of African commerce itself.

Shakira and Burna Boy to Kick Off 2026 World Cup as FIFA Plans Three-Nation Opening Spectacle

The 2026 FIFA World Cup will open not with one ceremony, but with three.

FIFA has unveiled a star-studded musical lineup for the tournament’s unprecedented three-nation opening, with Shakira and Nigerian Afrobeats superstar Burna Boy headlining the first ceremony in Mexico City ahead of the cohosts’ match against South Africa.

The Colombian icon and Burna Boy will perform “Dai Dai,” the tournament’s official song, on Thursday at the Estadio Azteca. They will be joined by a formidable Latin American lineup including Alejandro Fernández, Belinda, Danny Ocean, J Balvin, Lila Downs, Los Angeles Azules, Maná, and South African sensation Tyla.

For the first time in World Cup history, the tournament is being cohosted by three nations: Mexico, the United States, and Canada. FIFA has responded by planning a curtain-raiser for each host country’s opening match.

In Toronto on 12th June, Alanis Morissette and crooner Michael Bublé will headline ahead of Canada’s match against Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Later that same day in Los Angeles, Katy Perry will front the US ceremony before the American team faces Paraguay. She will be joined by LISA, Nigerian Afrobeats star Rema, Brazilian pop artist Anitta, and hip-hop artist Future.

The three ceremonies are being created by Italian producer Marco Balich, who was behind the spectacular opening ceremony for this year’s Milan Cortina Winter Olympics. Each show will be held approximately 90 minutes before kickoff, giving fans a full entertainment experience before the football begins.

FIFA has indicated that more artists will be announced for the US and Canadian ceremonies in the coming days.

Shakira’s involvement in the 2026 World Cup does not end with the opening ceremony. She is also among the headliners scheduled to perform at a Super Bowl-style half-time show during the World Cup final, alongside Madonna and the globally renowned boy band BTS.

That performance is expected to be one of the most-watched musical events of the year, broadcast to hundreds of millions of viewers worldwide.

The official tournament song “Dai Dai” is more than just a catchy tune. FIFA has announced that the song aims to raise $100 million in support of the FIFA Global Citizen Education Fund, linking the joy of the beautiful game to tangible social impact.

The title “Dai Dai” which has become a viral dance challenge on social media has already sparked global participation, with fans posting their own choreography across TikTok, Instagram, and other platforms.

The last time the World Cup was held in the United States, in 1994, Diana Ross performed at the opening ceremony in Chicago and famously missed a penalty kick as part of the show. That moment has since become one of the most memorable and most replayed in World Cup entertainment history.

Thirty-two years later, the 2026 edition promises to raise the bar significantly, with three ceremonies, a continent-spanning format, and some of the biggest names in global music.

Football fans and music lovers alike will have their eyes on Mexico City on Thursday for the first of the three openings. With Shakira and Burna Boy sharing the stage, and a lineup that spans Latin America and Africa, the ceremony is being positioned as a celebration of the sport’s global reach.

Meanwhile, the US and Canadian lineups reflect the diverse musical tastes of their home audiences from Katy Perry’s pop anthems to Alanis Morissette’s rock legacy and Michael Bublé’s crooning standards.

As the world turns its attention to North America, one thing is clear: the 2026 World Cup is shaping up to be as much a musical festival as a football tournament.

The Home Where Night Became a Time for Dreams Again

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A #100DaysofSolar Human Impact Story from Buteyongera, Mukono District, Uganda

Every evening, silence used to arrive early inside Christine Nandala Kasumba’s home in Buteyongera, Mukono District.

Not because the family wanted to sleep.

But because darkness gave them little choice.

With nine people living in the household, evenings often became frustrating. The children wanted to study, revise their books, and continue learning, but the darkness inside the home made it almost impossible. To avoid the daily struggle of children begging to read without proper light, the family simply went to bed early.

Night after night, learning stopped when the sun disappeared.

And slowly, dreams waited for daylight too.

Then Solar M7 arrived.

And everything inside the home began to change.

Now, when evening comes, the house no longer falls silent.

Light fills the rooms.

Children gather together with books open in their hands. Voices rise with excitement as they read, revise, and laugh together late into the evening. What was once darkness and frustration has become time for learning, bonding, and possibility.

For Christine, the transformation feels deeply emotional.

“Before Solar M7, nights would end very quickly for us,” she shared during her interview. “The children wanted to study, but darkness always stopped them. Now they are learning more, spending more time with their books, and the whole home feels happier.”

The impact has been immediate and powerful.

With access to reliable solar light, the family now gains an estimated 10 to 15 extra study hours every week, precious time that could shape the future of the children living under Christine’s roof.

According to Doreen Nanfuka, one of the most visible transformations during #100DaysofSolar has been the emotional shift that happens when children can finally study freely at night.

“You see confidence returning to families,” Doreen explained. “Children become excited about learning again. Parents begin feeling hopeful again. Something as simple as light starts changing how families think about the future.”

Innocent Kawooya says education remains one of the strongest long-term outcomes of energy access initiatives like Solar M7.

“When children gain more hours to study consistently, entire futures begin to change,” he noted. “Energy access is directly connected to educational opportunity, confidence, and community transformation.”

Today, nights inside Christine’s home no longer feel empty.

The silence has been replaced by learning.

The darkness has been replaced by possibility.

And in a home where evenings once ended too soon, light is now giving new dreams the chance to grow.

Watch the full story of Christine Nandala Kasumba from Buteyongera, Mukono District, Uganda across our platforms:

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FUFA Moves Closer to NCS Registration as Delegates Unanimously Endorse Statute Amendments

The Federation of Uganda Football Associations (FUFA) has taken a significant step toward full compliance with national sports laws after delegates unanimously approved amendments to the federation’s statutes during an Extraordinary General Assembly held virtually on 4th June 2026.

The assembly, chaired by FUFA President Moses Magogo, brought together approximately 71 delegates representing the FUFA Executive Committee, Uganda Premier League clubs, Regional Football Associations, and various Special Interest Groups.

The amendments were introduced to align FUFA’s governing statutes with the requirements of the National Sports Act 2023 and the National Sports Regulations 2025. The changes are a key part of the federation’s ongoing re-registration process with the National Council of Sports (NCS).

Several articles of the FUFA Statutes, including Articles 1, 24, 36, 67, 68, 74, 75, and 91, were revised to meet the legal standards set out in the national sports framework.

FUFA Legal Director Denis Lukambi explained that the amendments were necessary to address gaps identified during the compliance process.

“The National Sports Regulations provide that the constitution of a national sports federation or association must include specific clauses,” Lukambi said. “The way these clauses are worded in the regulations, they were effectively a copy and paste into our FUFA statutes.”

He noted that approximately six mandatory clauses had previously been omitted. “These have now been resolved and submitted to the delegates of FUFA, who approved unanimously all the proposed amendments,” Lukambi said.

One of the most significant changes relates to how football-related disputes will be handled in Uganda.

Previously, FUFA referred disputes directly to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in Lausanne, Switzerland. Under the revised statutes, the arbitration framework established under the National Sports Act will become the primary avenue for handling football-related disputes in Uganda.

“The recommendation now is that we refer all matters relating to disputes to national sports arbitration in accordance with the National Sports Act,” Lukambi explained.

The amendments provide that decisions made by arbitrators appointed under the Act will be final and binding. However, the Court of Arbitration for Sport remains available as an alternative mechanism where the national arbitration system is not yet operational.

With the delegates’ approval secured, FUFA will now forward the amended statutes to the National Council of Sports for final review and approval.

“After here, we are going to submit our statutes to the National Council of Sports for further approval so that we comply entirely with the law to be registered as a national sports federation,” Lukambi added.

The approval comes at a crucial stage in the re-registration exercise for national sports federations and associations, which is expected to conclude on 7th June.

FUFA’s application for re-registration was originally submitted to the NCS in June 2025 and was followed by a nationwide verification exercise. The assessment confirmed football activities in 114 of Uganda’s 146 districts, surpassing the minimum requirement of 110 districts needed for recognition as a national sports federation.

That finding reinforced FUFA’s claim to be a genuinely national sport, with organised football present in more than three-quarters of the country’s districts.

In his closing remarks, FUFA President Moses Magogo praised delegates for their participation and highlighted the importance of ensuring football governance remains in line with national legislation.

“It is important for us to ensure that we clear and clean up our governance system,” Magogo said. “Let us cooperate and ensure that we have statutes that are talking to the law and are also talking to the modernity of the game as we also want it.”

He thanked the National Council of Sports, FUFA’s legal team, and the delegates for their role in the process, describing the unanimous vote as a strong endorsement of the federation’s commitment to good governance and regulatory compliance.

The re-registration of national sports federations under the National Sports Act 2023 represents a fundamental reshaping of Uganda’s sports governance landscape. Federations that fail to comply risk losing official recognition, which would affect their ability to receive government funding, host international events, or represent Uganda abroad.

By moving swiftly to amend its statutes and secure delegate approval, FUFA has positioned itself as one of the more compliant federations in the country. The unanimous vote also signals internal unity on an issue that could have exposed divisions in less cohesive organisations.

All eyes now turn to the National Council of Sports, which must give its final approval before FUFA can be formally re-registered. With the 7th June deadline approaching, the ball is now in the regulator’s court.