Data from South Africa's year-end trading period signals resilient consumer demand and a strong foundation for continued growth in digital transactions across business and consumer segments within Standard Bank. As businesses of all sizes and industries continued to embrace digital payments, the trajectory points to a sustained momentum in transaction volumes and values in the months ahead. The 2025 festive season trade results reflected this robust consumer activity, reinforcing optimism and strong momentum in digital transactions, following double-digit increases in both transaction volumes and values,

 

Digital transaction volumes rose by 10.5% year-on-year (YoY) to 74.15 million, while digital transaction value climbed by 10% YoY to R35.62 billion underscoring the growing role of digital financial services in supporting business growth and consumer spending during South Africa’s busiest trading period.

 

The surge in South African digital commerce reached an unprecedented peak, with e-commerce volumes growing by 40% YoY. This rapid acceleration signals a permanent shift in consumer behaviour, as shoppers move away from traditional retail toward mobile-first, digital storefronts. For merchants, this growth represents a massive opportunity to scale, but it also demands unified platforms that can handle increased transaction volumes across web and social channels without compromising speed or security.

 

Sector and Regional Growth Highlights:

 

  • Top sectors by turnover growth in December 2025:
    • Grocery stores – up 23% YoY
    • Food and convenience stores – up 12% YoY

 

  • Top regions by turnover growth in December 2025:
    • Gauteng – up 7% YoY
    • Western Cape – up 23% YoY
    • KwaZulu-Natal – up 10.5% YoY

 

“December’s spend reflects the strength of South Africa’s digital payments ecosystem. Consumers are embracing convenience, retailers are scaling online and integrated platforms, and together we are driving a more connected economy. This growth is not just about numbers, it is about trust, innovation, and the future of e-commerce,” said Norman Nyawo, Head of Merchant Solutions for Business and Commercial Banking at Standard Bank South Africa.

Aligned with the economic outlook for the year ahead, these trends open promising opportunities for South African SMEs.

 

Digital Payments as Core Business Infrastructure

 

  • Central to operations: Digital payments are no longer optional; they are now fundamental to how businesses operate. Customers expect the flexibility to pay anywhere, in-store, online, or on social platforms. Merchants who make payments easy sell more, check out faster, and lose fewer customers.

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