Orca Fraud secures seed funding to battle payments crime
Cape Town-based fraud intelligence startup Orca Fraud has raised a $2.35 million seed round led by African-focused VC firm Norrsken22. The company aims to embed real-time fraud detection directly into payment flows across Africa and other high-growth emerging markets, where digital transactions are expanding rapidly but protections often lag behind.
Real-time fraud intelligence for $5B+ in monthly volume
Orca Fraud currently monitors and analyzes more than $5 billion in monthly payment volume, working with banks, payment service providers, and fintech platforms. By integrating at the infrastructure layer, its platform provides instant risk scoring on transactions, helping partners block suspicious activity before funds leave customer accounts.
The startup combines machine learning models, shared fraud intelligence networks, and device-level behavioral signals to identify patterns of abuse. This approach is designed to combat a range of threats, including card-not-present fraud, account takeovers, social engineering scams, and merchant collusion.
Addressing the fraud gap in emerging markets
Across Africa and many emerging economies, the rapid growth of digital payments and mobile money has outpaced investments in advanced fraud prevention. As more consumers and small businesses come online, fraud losses and chargebacks are becoming a major cost for financial institutions and payment processors.
Orca Fraud positions itself as a shared defense layer for the ecosystem, allowing participants to pool anonymized intelligence on bad actors, mule accounts, and compromised devices. This network effect is intended to improve detection accuracy while reducing false positives that can frustrate legitimate users and merchants.
Growth plans following the Norrsken22-led round
The new capital from Norrsken22 and other investors will be used to scale engineering and data science teams, deepen integrations with major payment gateways, and expand into additional emerging markets beyond Africa. The company is also expected to invest in regulatory and compliance capabilities to support partnerships with banks and licensed financial institutions.
As regulators tighten oversight of financial crime and demand stronger know-your-customer (KYC) and transaction monitoring controls, solutions like Orca Fraud are likely to become a critical part of the digital payments infrastructure across the Global South.

