The digital products business is booming in Nigeria. Ebooks, online courses, templates, presets, printables, software tools — Nigerians are buying and selling digital products like never before. And the beauty of digital products is that you create once and sell forever. No inventory, no shipping, no wahala.
But choosing the right platform to sell your digital products is crucial. The wrong choice means higher fees eating into your profits, payment headaches, or a platform that your Nigerian customers cannot even pay on. I have tested all three major platforms — Selar, Gumroad, and Payhip — specifically from a Nigerian seller perspective. Here is my honest comparison.
Quick Overview: How Each Platform Works
Selar is a Nigerian-built platform designed specifically for African creators. It supports Naira payments natively, integrates with Nigerian banks and payment processors, and understands the local market. Think of it as the homegrown champion.
Gumroad is a US-based platform popular worldwide. It is polished, feature-rich, and has a large international audience. However, it was not designed with Nigerian sellers in mind, which creates some friction.
Payhip is a UK-based platform that offers digital product sales with a focus on simplicity. It supports multiple currencies and has competitive fees, but its presence in the Nigerian market is minimal.
Pricing and Fees Comparison
Selar:
Free plan: 0 monthly fee, but 5% transaction fee on each sale
Pro plan: ₦5,000/month, reduced to 2% transaction fee
Business plan: ₦15,000/month, further reduced fees
Supports Naira pricing directly — your customers pay in Naira
Payment processing: Paystack and Flutterwave (familiar to Nigerian buyers)
Gumroad:
No monthly fee
10% flat transaction fee on every sale (this is steep)
Additional payment processing fee (3.5% + $0.30 per transaction)
Total effective fee: approximately 13-14% per sale
Pays sellers via PayPal or direct deposit — problematic for Nigerians since PayPal does not work for receiving money in Nigeria
Payhip:
Free plan: 5% transaction fee
Plus plan: $29/month, 2% transaction fee
Pro plan: $99/month, 0% transaction fee
Supports PayPal and Stripe for payments
PayPal limitation applies to Nigerian sellers
Winner on fees: For Nigerian sellers, Selar wins. Not only are the fees competitive, but you avoid the PayPal problem entirely. Gumroad’s 10% fee plus PayPal complications make it the most expensive and inconvenient option.
Payment and Withdrawal: The Nigeria Factor
This is where the comparison gets real for Nigerian creators:
Selar: Your customers pay in Naira through Paystack, Flutterwave, or bank transfer — payment methods every Nigerian is familiar with. Withdrawals go directly to your Nigerian bank account within 24-48 hours. No dollar conversion headaches, no PayPal drama. This alone makes Selar the default choice for selling to Nigerian audiences.
Gumroad: Gumroad pays creators via PayPal or US direct deposit. Since PayPal does not support receiving payments in Nigeria, you would need a Payoneer account or a Grey.co dollar account to receive Gumroad payouts. This adds complexity and fees. Your Nigerian customers also face issues — they have to pay in dollars, which means dealing with exchange rates and card payment failures.
Payhip: Similar issues to Gumroad. Primary payment is through PayPal and Stripe. Stripe is not fully available in Nigeria yet, and PayPal does not work for Nigerian receivers. You would need workaround solutions for withdrawals.
Winner for Nigerian market: Selar, by a massive margin. If your primary audience is Nigerian, there is no contest.
Features Comparison
Selar Features:
Sell ebooks, courses, digital downloads, memberships, and coaching sessions
Built-in email marketing tools
Affiliate marketing system (let others promote your products)
WhatsApp integration for delivery (huge for Nigerian market)
Discount codes and coupons
Analytics dashboard
Custom checkout pages
Supports both one-time and subscription payments
Gumroad Features:
Clean, professional product pages
Built-in audience and discovery features
Email marketing and updates to customers
Membership and subscription support
Workflow automation
Embeddable purchase buttons for your website
Strong analytics
Payhip Features:
Digital downloads and memberships
EU VAT handling (useful for European customers)
Affiliate program
Discount codes
Embeddable widgets
Simple, clean interface
Feature winner: Gumroad has the most polished feature set for international selling. Selar has the best features for the Nigerian market specifically, including WhatsApp delivery and Naira payment processing.
When to Use Each Platform
Use Selar when:
Your primary audience is Nigerian or African
You want to price products in Naira
You want hassle-free withdrawals to your Nigerian bank
You sell courses, ebooks, or templates to a local audience
You want WhatsApp integration for marketing and delivery
Use Gumroad when:
Your audience is primarily international (US, UK, Europe)
You have a reliable way to receive dollar payments (Payoneer or Grey.co)
You want to tap into Gumroad built-in discovery and audience
You sell to a global market and price in USD
Use Payhip when:
You sell to European markets (EU VAT handling is a plus)
You want a simple, no-frills platform
You plan to sell enough volume to justify the Pro plan (0% fees)
My Recommendation for Nigerian Creators
For selling to Nigerians: Use Selar. It is Nigerian-built, understands the market, supports Naira, and makes everything from payment to withdrawal seamless. The 5% free-plan fee is reasonable, and upgrading to Pro at ₦5,000/month makes sense once your sales justify it.
For selling to international audiences: Use Selar + a personal website. Selar supports dollar pricing too, and with Payoneer as your payment processor, you can sell to anyone worldwide. Having your own website built on Hostinger gives you a professional presence and more control over branding.
Advanced strategy: Use both Selar and Gumroad. List your products on Selar for Nigerian customers (Naira pricing) and on Gumroad for international customers (USD pricing). This maximises your reach without forcing either audience to deal with currency conversion.
Digital Products That Sell Well in Nigeria
Not sure what to sell? Here are digital products that Nigerian creators are successfully monetising:
Ebooks: How-to guides on cooking Nigerian dishes, exam prep materials, business guides, self-help. Price range: ₦2,000-₦15,000
Online courses: Tech skills (web development, data analysis), business skills (social media marketing, freelancing), JAMB/WAEC prep. Price range: ₦10,000-₦100,000
Templates: Resume/CV templates, business plan templates, social media templates, invoice templates. Price range: ₦1,500-₦10,000
Notion and productivity templates: Growing market among young Nigerian professionals. Price range: ₦2,000-₦15,000
Design assets: Logo templates, social media kits, Canva templates. Price range: ₦3,000-₦20,000
Software tools and plugins: WordPress themes/plugins, spreadsheet tools, automation scripts. Price range: ₦5,000-₦50,000
Getting Started: Your First Digital Product in 7 Days
Day 1-2: Choose your product type and topic. Pick something you know well or can research thoroughly. Validate the idea by checking if people are searching for it (use Google Trends and AnswerThePublic).
Day 3-5: Create your product. For an ebook, use Google Docs or Canva. For a course, record video lessons with your phone (good lighting matters more than camera quality). For templates, use the relevant tool (Canva, Notion, Google Sheets).
Day 6: Set up your Selar account. Upload your product, write a compelling description, set your price, and create a professional product image.
Day 7: Launch. Share on your social media, WhatsApp status, and relevant groups. Ask friends and family to share. Your first sale might come from someone you know — and that is perfectly fine.
The digital product economy in Nigeria is still young, which means the opportunity is massive. While physical product businesses deal with logistics, customs, and inventory, digital product sellers enjoy near-100% profit margins and zero delivery headaches. Start small, learn what your audience wants, and scale from there.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which platform is best for selling digital products in Nigeria?
Selar is the best for Nigerian creators. It accepts naira payments, integrates with Paystack and Flutterwave, and pays to Nigerian bank accounts. Gumroad is better for international audiences but charges in USD. Use Selar for Nigerian customers and Gumroad for global reach.
How much can I earn selling digital products in Nigeria?
Beginners earn ₦20,000–₦100,000/month. Established creators earn ₦200,000–₦1,000,000+/month. Top Nigerian digital product sellers earn ₦5,000,000+/month from courses and templates. Earnings depend on your audience size and product quality.
What digital products sell best in Nigeria?
Online courses (₦5,000–₦50,000 each), eBooks (₦1,000–₦10,000), design templates (Canva, social media), spreadsheet tools, and business plan templates. Tech skills courses and make-money-online content sell the most in the Nigerian market.
Does Selar charge fees on sales?
Selar charges 5% per transaction for the free plan. The Pro plan (₦5,000/month) reduces this to 3%. Gumroad charges 10% on the free plan. Payhip charges 5% on free plan, 2% on Plus. For Nigerian sellers, Selar offers the best value with local payment integration.
How do I receive payments from Selar in Nigeria?
Selar pays directly to your Nigerian bank account via Paystack or Flutterwave. Withdrawals process within 24–48 hours. No minimum withdrawal for bank transfers. You can also receive via Payoneer for international sales. Keep records for FIRS tax purposes.