A real page builder that makes your booking page look like yours, not Calendly's. Plus payment processors that actually work here. PayFast, Yoco, Peach Payments, Paystack.
No credit card. $10/month for South Africans. Applied automatically.
Built in 2026. Ships weekly. Open changelog β

Payment processors that actually work in SA:
...but here's the thing.
Stripe is closed to South Africa. PayPal bleeds 5-6% in fees. And every booking tool worth using only supports those two.
MintCal supports 10 payment providers, including four built for this market. You charge in ZAR. You get paid into your SA bank account. No workarounds.
MintCal pages aren't mockups. Here's a live one built by a Cape Town dev: bio, booking events, testimonials, FAQ, video, the lot. Take a look, then build yours.
Built by a Cape Town dev. Same page builder, same widgets, used to build this.
Open the live page βCard + EFT + SnapScan + Zapper. ZAR settlement.
Card payments online + in-person. ZAR settlement.
Multi-currency African coverage. ZAR settlement.
Cards, bank transfers, mobile money. Pan-African.
Scheduling
Everything else
Roughly R180-R200. VAT included. Applied automatically.
Locked at $10/month for life when you start your trial.
Yes. PayFast, Yoco, and Peach all sign up sole props with an SA ID number. Paystack requires a registered business in South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana, or Kenya. PayFast is usually the easiest first step.
For PayFast and Yoco, no - a personal SA bank account works to start, though you should move to a business account once you cross R1m/year for tax reasons. Peach and Paystack require business banking.
Yes. Thirteen widgets, 19 fonts (heading and body separate), gradient and pattern backgrounds, six industry templates, drag-and-drop column layouts. If you've ever wanted to put a video, FAQ, testimonials, and stats below your calendar - you can.
You handle VAT yourself, the same way you would for any other invoiced revenue. MintCal doesn't act as a merchant-of-record (with one exception - DodoPayments does, and they handle tax compliance for you globally if you use them).
Stripe has been "evaluating" South Africa for years with no concrete launch date. As of May 2026, SA-registered businesses still cannot sign up for a Stripe account through standard channels. Don't plan around it.
It's automatic. When you visit from a South African IP, MintCal applies parity pricing and you pay $10/month (roughly R180-R200 depending on the exchange rate that day, with 15% SA VAT included). The price is locked at that level for as long as you remain subscribed. No coupon code, no application form.
PayFast accepts international cards in ZAR. Peach and Paystack support multi-currency. So yes - your overseas clients can pay you, and you receive ZAR in your SA bank account. The exchange happens on their side at the card-network rate.
14 days, no credit card required. After that it's $10/month (~R180-R200, VAT included) with South African pricing applied automatically.
Hey, I'm Ruoall and I'm based in Cape Town. I built MintCal because I'd been through the cycle. Calendly's page looks like everyone else's Calendly page, and the moment you want to charge for a session, Stripe says no, and PayPal eats your fees, and the whole booking experience falls apart.
There's no enterprise sales team behind this. It's one product, built end-to-end, priced for solo professionals, and shipped weekly. If something doesn't work, you can email me and I'll usually reply within a day.
And hey, thanks for supporting a locally developed product.

Ruoall Chapman, Founder
Set-up takes 3 minutes. The trial is 14 days. You can connect PayFast, Yoco, Peach, or Paystack from Settings the moment you sign up. No waitlist, no sales call.
Start your trial β