Yoco has announced its biggest product launch to date: more than 20 new products and features designed to give South Africa’s independent businesses the advantage they need to compete, alongside a first look at Yoco AI — the company’s first AI agent.
For years, independent businesses — which power 40% of South Africa’s economy — have run on tools never built for them: generic, disconnected, and designed for big business then watered down for small. Yoco started by solving access to payments. Today, it is giving independent businesses what it calls an unfair advantage: a smart commerce platform designed to move them from survival into growth.
“Yoco started by giving independent businesses access to payments. Today, we’re giving them the tools that used to belong only to big business, at a price built for small business. We call it the unfair advantage,” said Carl Wazen, Yoco Chief Business Officer.
Yoco AI: Intelligence Democratised
Yoco believes AI should not be reserved for large businesses with dedicated data teams. For independent businesses operating on thin margins in constant volatility, insight is not a luxury — it is survival. Less than a month after announcing its acquisition of Dyner.ai, Yoco revealed Yoco AI: its first AI agent for independent businesses, coming soon. Yoco AI will learn each business’s own sales patterns, costs, and staffing — flagging what is happening and what to do next, before the owner even has to ask.
Yoco Loyalty
Yoco Loyalty is South Africa’s first broad-based, card-linked loyalty programme for independent businesses. It rewards customers automatically every time they tap — no app, no punchcard, no setup required. One in three customers who visit Yoco food and beverage merchants return at least twice a month. That loyalty can now be formally recognised and rewarded.
Yoco Connect: Ending the Fragmentation Tax
The average South African small business operates across eight or more disconnected apps just to get through the week. Yoco Connect brings accounting, e-commerce, bookings, inventory, and loyalty into one place. It is already powering over 500 merchants through its Xero integration alone.
Yoco is also opening up its platform. The Yoco Developer Hub has more than 50 third-party apps in active use, and the new Yoco MCP Server connects AI tools — including Claude and ChatGPT — directly to a merchant’s account, turning plain conversation into payment links, refunds, and reconciliation.
Industry Modes: Built for How Each Industry Actually Works
Yoco launched four new industry modes for its point-of-sale solution: F&B Counter Service, F&B Table Service, Retail, and Beauty and Services. Each mode includes features built specifically for that industry — from tableside ordering on Yoco’s card machines to appointment management for services-based merchants.
Independent Businesses Are the Economy in Motion
Today’s announcements come as the macro environment remains challenging for South African entrepreneurs. In a recent Yoco survey, 46% of independent business owners said they feel less confident than at the start of the year, and 51% said consumer spending pressure has further dented their confidence.
Yoco’s view — shaped by its network of 200,000 merchants — is that independent businesses are not peripheral to the economy. They are the economy in motion. With today’s launch, Yoco is making a clear bet: independent businesses do not need more tools. They need the right platform — one built for their world, where every minute counts and visibility is the difference between absorbing pressure and moving through it.

