In a continent where aggressive loan recovery tactics have long been the norm, Nigeria’s BFREE is charting a different path — and it’s starting to pay off.
The Lagos-headquartered ethical debt recovery startup has secured a $3 million debt investment from the Verdant Capital Hybrid Fund, the Johannesburg-based private equity vehicle focused on inclusive finance across emerging markets. The funding will enable BFREE to purchase and restructure distressed loan portfolios from African financial institutions — a niche but fast-emerging market segment that few have been able to crack at scale.
The capital injection, structured as a loan, marks a significant vote of confidence in BFREE’s tech-enabled and borrower-first approach to collections — one that’s increasingly resonating with microfinance institutions and commercial lenders seeking an alternative to traditional recovery practices.
“This investment will help unlock liquidity for financial institutions saddled with non-performing assets, while also offering defaulters a dignified path back to creditworthiness,” said Verdant Capital in a statement.
From Call Centers to Code
Founded in 2020 by digital lending veterans Florian Flosbach (CEO), Chukwudi Enyi (COO), and Moses Nmor (CPO), BFREE emerged out of frustration with the prevailing loan collection playbook: harassment, debt shaming, and court orders. Instead, the startup has built an AI-powered platform that profiles borrowers, predicts their capacity to repay, and customizes engagement based on behavioral data — all while maintaining strict ethical standards.
To date, BFREE has handled over $740 million worth of distressed loans, reaching 6.6 million borrowers across Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya. Its clients include over 30 financial institutions, from digital lenders to regulated banks.
This latest deal follows a similar $3 million investment in 2024 from UK-based TLG Capital, with which BFREE partnered to promote “ethical microlending” practices. That initiative allowed BFREE to acquire non-performing loans and restructure them with more flexible terms, while simultaneously providing borrowers with financial literacy tools.
BFREE’s focus on distressed loan portfolio financing — a model where the company acquires and manages written-off or delinquent loans from lenders — is relatively novel in Africa. Historically, the segment has been stymied by poor borrower data, legal bottlenecks around loan transferability, and pricing opacity.
But by leveraging proprietary repayment prediction algorithms and maintaining ethical communication with borrowers, BFREE is carving out a scalable model. Its recovery methods — which avoid late fees, debt blacklisting, or excessive penalties — contrast sharply with legacy practices in many emerging markets.
The company’s tech stack includes behavioral scoring engines, automated engagement bots, and borrower self-service portals. BFREE also boasts a growing roster of fintech-savvy talent, including CTO Konrad Pawlus and Yohan Theatre, who is exploring how blockchain and DeFi tools could further disrupt secondary debt trading across the continent.
With the new Verdant Capital funding, BFREE will double down on acquiring distressed portfolios that traditional lenders would have otherwise written off. For the financial institutions involved, it’s a rare opportunity to clean up balance sheets without resorting to costly litigation or asset write-downs.
According to Verdant Capital, the investment aligns with its mandate to support inclusive financial institutions and improve repayment outcomes for defaulting borrowers — a win-win for lenders and clients alike.
The deal also highlights growing investor interest in post-loan infrastructure and credit recovery as part of the broader financial inclusion value chain in Africa. As microfinance and buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) products proliferate, effective — and ethical — debt recovery is becoming mission-critical.
While many African fintechs focus on lending, BFREE’s contrarian approach — specializing in collections — is gaining traction. As regulators across the continent begin to scrutinize aggressive recovery tactics, startups like BFREE may well define the next wave of credit infrastructure.