The dominance of Visa and Mastercard in global transactions has long been a painful reality for businesses dealing with high interchange fees and slow settlement times. But the tide is finally turning. Neema, a cross-border payments platform catering to financial institutions, just launched 'Request-to-Pay' (RTP), a new collection method designed to accelerate the shift toward real-time, low-cost Global A2A payments.
For SaaS companies, online merchants, and marketplaces, the current card-based system is a significant drag on margins and customer experience. Funds settle in days, not seconds, and card-related failures—expired details, blocked transactions, insufficient credit—create churn, increase support tickets, and necessitate costly retries.
Neema’s RTP bypasses this infrastructure entirely. Instead of routing transactions through card schemes, the platform allows financial institutions using Neema to collect funds directly from the paying party’s bank account in real time. This move reinforces Neema’s role as a leader in the broader transformation away from traditional card payments toward faster, more cost-efficient Account-to-Account (A2A) transactions worldwide.
Killing the Middleman
The core benefit of this shift for businesses is twofold: instant cash flow and margin protection. By eliminating high card network interchange and processing fees, businesses immediately boost their bottom line. Furthermore, real-time settlement means predictable cash flow, a massive advantage over the multi-day settlement cycles common in card-based systems. This predictability unlocks smoother operations and reduces the risk associated with delayed funds.
This expansion of B2B and B2C cross-border solutions leverages Neema’s proprietary Dynamic Routing technology, which aims to ensure every transaction finds the best possible route. As more countries adopt real-time payment rails—like the UK’s Faster Payments or Brazil’s Pix—the infrastructure for Global A2A payments is maturing, cementing platforms like Neema as key infrastructure layers in the future of global commerce.


