Kingston, Jamaica — Renozan Limited is deepening its controlled pilot phase with the expansion of its terminal deployments to four additional pharmacies across its growing national network. Following its initial launch at New Horizon Pharmacy, the fintech firm has now activated the Renozan Terminal at Dolphin Pharmacy, Mona Pharmacy, Regal Pharmacy, and Beverly Hills Pharmacy—bringing its live testing locations to five.

This latest move signals Renozan’s intent to intensify pressure testing under real-world conditions as it primes its zero-fee terminal solution for islandwide expansion.

“These next four locations allow us to diversify our pilot environments and pressure-test across varied consumer flows and operational models,” said a Renozan rollout strategist. “Each site is a data point. Each tap is a stress test.”

Renozan currently maintains relationships across more than 250 pharmacies and roughly 1,000 supermarkets, restaurants, and wholesalers, giving the company a significant base from which to launch its wider network once the pilot phase concludes.

The terminals—offering no transaction fees, and seamless syncing with Renozan’s digital ecosystem—are already being closely watched by competitors, regulators, and merchants alike.

Analysts view this staged expansion as a calculated attempt to perfect the system’s backend behavior before Renozan begins its broader commercial assault. “This isn’t just a rollout. It’s a full-scale stress simulation,” said one Kingston-based fintech advisor.

Momentum Builds, Expectations Rise

Early data from the New Horizon launch reportedly met internal benchmarks, prompting Renozan to accelerate the inclusion of these four strategic locations. Each pharmacy was selected based on transaction volume, POS reliability, and network influence—paving the way for expansion into adjacent sectors.

As the fintech continues to reinforce its market foothold, retailers across Jamaica are positioning themselves to join what some insiders are already calling “the Renozan network effect”—a sweeping move toward unified payment infrastructure, free from the grip of traditional processors.

With regulatory conversations ongoing and infrastructure testing ramping up, Jamaica’s payment landscape may soon look very different.


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