United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc has reaffirmed its leadership as one of the continent’s most innovative and resilient financial institutions, after emerging as African Bank of the Year 2025 by The Banker for the third time in five years.
UBA also won the Best Bank of the Year awards in nine of its twenty African subsidiaries, bringing its total awards this year to ten, as UBA Benin, UBA Chad, UBA Republic of Congo (Congo-Brazzaville), UBA Liberia, UBA Mali, UBA Mozambique, UBA Senegal, UBA Sierra Leone and UBA Zambia all came out tops as the best banks in their respective countries.
This underscores the bank’s strength across West, Central and Southern Africa and highlights the depth of its Pan-African franchise, the Group announced on Sunday.
The Banker, a leading global finance news publication of the Financial Times of London, organises the annual Bank of the Year Awards, and this year’s edition was held at a grand ceremony at The Peninsula, London, on Wednesday.
The chief executive officer, UBA UK, Deji Adeyelure, received the awards on behalf of the bank, representing the Group managing director/CEO, Oliver Alawuba, and was accompanied by the bank’s Head, Business Development, Mark Ifashe, and Head, Financial Institutions, Shilpam Jha.
The Banker’s awards are widely regarded as the most respected and rigorous in the global banking industry, celebrating institutions that demonstrate outstanding performance, innovation and strategic execution.
In its remarks on UBA’s winnings, thebanker.com said: “For the third time in five years, UBA Group has won the coveted Bank of the Year award for Africa. UBA Group time after time punches above its weight against its larger African rivals.
The bank this year also takes home nine separate country awards (one more than it gained for its last continental win in 2024), equivalent to around a quarter of the awards for the continent, and more than any of its continent-wide rivals.”
Continuing, it said: “Perhaps even more impressive is the fact that the awards were won across a broad geographic spread, going to lenders based in the Economic Community of West African States (Benin, Liberia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and former member Mali), the Central African Economic and Monetary Community (Chad, Republic of Congo) and the Southern African Development Community (Mozambique, Zambia). Its award wins were particularly notable in the highly competitive categories for Benin and Mozambique.”
The Banker also highlighted UBA’s strong financial performance and commitment to future growth. In 2024, the Group recorded a 46.8 per cent increase in assets and a 6.1 per cent rise in pre-tax profits in local currency terms, whilst continuing to invest significantly in talent and technology. West Africa remains UBA’s heartland, with operating revenue and profit increasing by 87 per cent and 89 per cent respectively in H1 2025.
The bank’s digital and innovation leadership was equally recognised. During the year under review, it launched its Advance Top-Up buy-now-pay-later feature on the *919# USSD platform, expanding financial access for customers, whilst the bank’s chatbot Leo continued its strong growth trajectory, with transaction volumes rising by 29 per cent year-on-year in H1 2025. Notably, in August, Leo became the first African banking chatbot to enable cross-border payments via the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS).
UBA’s GMD/CEO, Oliver Alawuba, said the recognition affirms the bank’s long-term strategy and customer-first philosophy.
“This honour reflects the strength of our Pan-African network, the trust of our customers, and the dedication of our people. Winning Africa’s Bank of the Year for the third time in five years is not by chance; it is a testament to disciplined execution, innovation, and a deep understanding of the markets we serve,” Alawuba said.
“Our nine country awards across diverse regions of Africa show that UBA is not just growing, but growing with impact. We remain committed to driving financial inclusion, supporting economic development, and deploying technology that makes banking simpler, faster and more accessible to Africans everywhere,” he added.
United Bankcutting-edge for Africa is one of the largest employers in the financial sector on the African continent, with 25,000 employees Group-wide and serving over 45 million customers globally. Operating in twenty African countries, the United Kingdom, the United States of America, France and the United Arab Emirates, UBA provides retail, commercial and institutional banking services, leading financial inclusion and implementing technology.
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