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Starting an Online Store in Rwanda

E-commerce in Rwanda is growing fast, driven by mobile money and improving logistics. Here’s a practical guide to getting your first online store up and running.

Aline Niyonsaba · Business and lifestyle, Kigali
Published Updated 8 min read

A fashion designer in Kigali Heights was selling exclusively through her shop and Instagram DMs. Monthly revenue was decent but capped by foot traffic and how many DMs she could respond to personally. She launched a simple online store in January. By March, online orders accounted for 40% of revenue — including orders from Huye, Musanze, and Rubavu she’d never have reached otherwise.

Is Rwanda ready for e-commerce?

The short answer: yes, with caveats. The foundations are there:

  • Mobile money penetration is high — MTN MoMo and Airtel Money are ubiquitous
  • Internet penetration is growing — over 60% of the population has mobile internet
  • The Post Office and private couriers (SafeMotos Deliver, Kigali Logistics) can handle last-mile delivery
  • Rwanda’s addressing system (Urutonde) is improving, making deliveries more reliable

The caveat: this isn’t Amazon territory yet. Expectations around delivery speed, returns, and payment methods are different. Adapt your model to local realities.

Payment: make MoMo your default

Card penetration in Rwanda is low. MoMo penetration is high. If you only accept Visa and Mastercard, you’re excluding most of your potential market.

Your payment setup should be:

  1. MTN MoMo and Airtel Money — primary payment methods
  2. Visa/Mastercard — for the segment that has cards
  3. Cash on delivery — consider offering this initially to build trust (many first-time online shoppers prefer it)

Payment aggregators like Flutterwave, DPO, and IremboPay handle all these methods through a single integration.

Platform options

You have three realistic options:

  • Shopify — global leader, easy to use, but payment gateway integration for Rwanda requires Flutterwave or similar. From USD 39/month
  • WooCommerce on WordPress — more flexible, more complex. Good if you want full control. Hosting from RWF 10,000/month
  • Custom-built store — through a web agency or provider like Kisimenti. Higher upfront investment but built specifically for the Rwandan market

Delivery and logistics

This is where most online stores in Rwanda struggle. Options:

  • Self-delivery — works if you’re Kigali-only and have a moto or car. Cheapest but doesn’t scale
  • SafeMotos Deliver — on-demand delivery within Kigali. Good for same-day delivery
  • Private courier services — for intercity delivery. Rwanda Post is reliable for standard timelines
  • Pickup points — some businesses use their physical store as a pickup point. Saves delivery cost and brings foot traffic

Start small and simple

Don’t try to launch with 500 products, three payment methods, and nationwide delivery on day one. Start with:

  1. Your 10–20 best-selling products
  2. One payment method (MoMo)
  3. Delivery in Kigali only
  4. A simple WhatsApp backup for order issues

Expand once you’ve processed 50–100 orders and understand the logistics. The businesses that succeed in Rwandan e-commerce are the ones that start scrappy and iterate, not the ones that try to be Amazon on day one.

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Starting an Online Store in Rwanda — Kisimenti Blog