How to accept crypto payments in Nigeria
If you sell online from Nigeria, you've likely hit the wall: Stripe doesn't onboard Nigerian businesses, and PayPal can't be used to freely receive money here. For course creators, freelancers, and digital sellers working with international buyers, that leaves no clean mainstream way to get paid — which is a big reason USDT became a default for online commerce in Nigeria.
Why USDT specifically: it's pegged to the US dollar, so the amount you're owed doesn't swing with the naira; it moves cheaply on Tron (TRC20); and any buyer abroad can send it without a bank in the loop.
The clean way to take it: you can post a wallet address and ask buyers to DM you a transaction hash — but that's manual, easy to fake, and easy to get wrong (wrong network, wrong amount). StableDeliver gives you a checkout instead: the buyer pays USDT to your own wallet, the payment is verified on-chain, and your product is delivered automatically. It's non-custodial — the money goes straight to you, with no processor that can freeze your account.
Crypto payments are irreversible and you're responsible for your own taxes; StableDeliver is a software tool, not a bank. See also accepting crypto in Pakistan and accepting USDT on Telegram.