πŸ“± Mobile Money Β· Fees Β· Uganda

MTN MoMo & Airtel Money Transfer and Withdrawal Fees in Uganda (2026)

πŸ“ Uganda✍️ Kennedy NyabwalaπŸ•’ 6 min read

⚠️ Fees change. Mobile money tariffs are revised by MTN and Airtel from time to time, and Uganda's mobile money tax has changed before. The figures below are indicative, based on published tariffs as of early 2026. Always confirm the exact charge β€” the amount is shown on screen before you confirm any transaction. Do not treat this as a guaranteed price list.

How mobile money fees work in Uganda

There are three different charges people confuse. Sending money (peer-to-peer transfer) has one fee. Withdrawing cash at an agent has a separate, usually higher fee. And on top of withdrawals, the government charges a 0.5% mobile money tax (the "MoMo levy"), calculated on the amount you withdraw. Sending to a registered wallet is generally cheaper than withdrawing cash, which is why keeping money in the wallet β€” and paying merchants directly β€” saves money.

MTN MoMo & Airtel Money sending fees (by amount)

Sending (transfer) charges are tiered by the amount you send. MTN and Airtel publish broadly comparable structures. The bands below are indicative for registered wallet-to-wallet sending:

Amount sent (UGX)Indicative sending fee (UGX)
500 – 2,500~ 0 – 100
2,501 – 5,000~ 100 – 220
5,001 – 15,000~ 220 – 360
15,001 – 30,000~ 360 – 460
30,001 – 60,000~ 460 – 720
60,001 – 125,000~ 720 – 1,000
125,001 – 250,000~ 1,000 – 1,450
250,001 – 500,000~ 1,450 – 2,000
500,001 – 1,000,000~ 2,000 – 3,200
1,000,001 – 5,000,000~ 3,200 – 5,000+

Sending to a registered wallet on the same or another network. Cross-network (MTN↔Airtel) sending uses the sending tariff. Exact fee is shown before you confirm.

Withdrawal (cash-out) fees + the 0.5% tax

Withdrawing cash at an agent costs more than sending, and the 0.5% mobile money tax is added on the withdrawal amount. As a guide, Airtel Money withdrawals start around UGX 330 for very small amounts and rise to roughly UGX 7,500 for amounts above UGX 1 million; MTN MoMo withdrawal fees are broadly similar (often slightly higher than Airtel in the same band).

Amount withdrawn (UGX)Indicative withdrawal fee (UGX)+ 0.5% tax (UGX)
500 – 5,000~ 330 – 440~ 3 – 25
5,001 – 15,000~ 440 – 700~ 25 – 75
15,001 – 45,000~ 700 – 900~ 75 – 225
45,001 – 125,000~ 900 – 1,800~ 225 – 625
125,001 – 250,000~ 1,800 – 3,200~ 625 – 1,250
250,001 – 500,000~ 3,200 – 5,000~ 1,250 – 2,500
500,001 – 1,000,000~ 5,000 – 7,000~ 2,500 – 5,000
Above 1,000,000~ 7,000 – 7,5000.5% of amount

πŸ”’ Safety: Both MTN and Airtel deduct fees automatically from your account. Never pay an agent separately for a transaction β€” if an agent asks for an extra cash fee on top, that is a scam. Your account statement (free in the MoMo and Airtel Money apps) shows every fee charged.

How to pay less in fees

Why fees matter if you pay many people

If you run payroll or pay a group of workers, riders or agents, transfer fees add up fast across dozens of payments β€” and so does the time spent sending one by one. A bulk payout that loads the wallet once and disburses to everyone is both faster and easier to reconcile, because every fee and payment is recorded in one place.

πŸ’¬ Paying many people every week?

Basket Payroll's Quick Pay lets you pay staff, riders, agents or casual workers across MTN and Airtel in one batch β€” with a record of every payment and fee. No registration needed for your first payouts.

solutions@basketadvisory.comTry Quick Pay

Sources: MTN Uganda and Airtel Uganda published mobile money tariffs; Uganda 0.5% mobile money tax. Figures indicative as of early 2026 and rounded into bands for guidance β€” exact charges are shown in-app and at the point of transaction, and may change. Confirm with your provider (MTN 100, Airtel 100).

About the Author
Kennedy Nyabwala
Founder Β· Basket Advisory Technologies

Kennedy Nyabwala is the founder of Basket Advisory Technologies, with extensive cross-sector experience spanning e-commerce, agribusiness, supply chain, logistics, and fintech. He works with businesses, NGOs and financial institutions across Uganda and East Africa on payroll compliance, workforce payments, credit infrastructure, and go-to-market strategy. Based in Kampala, Uganda.

basketadvisory.com β†’
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