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The ₦585 Billion Question: Who Really Wins as Nigerians Pay the Price for Going Digital -By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo

Nigeria stands at a delicate crossroads. The push toward a cashless economy is necessary, but sustainability depends on balancing efficiency with fairness. Lowering cumulative transaction costs for frequent users, introducing tiered or subsidized pricing for small businesses, enhancing transparency in how charges are applied, and leveraging fintech innovation to reduce operational costs are critical considerations. Without such adjustments, the system risks becoming counterproductive by discouraging the very digital participation it seeks to promote.

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Daniel Nduka Okonkwo

Bank transfer charges in Nigeria have evolved into more than routine deductions; they now highlight structural challenges within the financial system that affect efficiency and place added pressure on everyday citizens. For millions of Nigerians, especially low-income earners and small business owners, these charges reduce disposable income, increase the cost of living, and limit access to financial inclusion. While institutions benefit from the current framework, ordinary people face hidden costs that steadily erode their financial stability.

The consequences of these charges extend beyond personal inconvenience. They introduce inefficiencies into the wider economy by discouraging frequent transactions and slowing the circulation of money. Small businesses, which depend heavily on transfers to suppliers and customers, are disproportionately impacted and are often forced to absorb higher costs or pass them on to consumers. This dynamic restricts entrepreneurial growth and reinforces inequality, as those with fewer resources shoulder the greatest burden.

Additionally, high transfer charges can unintentionally push individuals toward informal or less secure alternatives, increasing the risk of theft and fraud. When citizens avoid formal banking systems due to prohibitive costs, they expose themselves to unsafe practices such as cash handling or unregulated savings groups. This weakens trust in the financial sector and slows progress toward a more inclusive, digitized economy. Tackling these challenges requires thoughtful reforms and practical strategies that empower Nigerians to reduce costs, strengthen financial participation, and build resilience within the economy.

Recent policy adjustments by the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, have reshaped the structure of electronic transfer charges in ways that directly affect daily financial activity. As of April 2026, transfers above ₦10,000 typically attract a minimum total charge of about ₦60, combining bank transfer fees with the ₦50 Electronic Money Transfer Levy, EMTL, commonly referred to as stamp duty. Transfers between ₦10,000 and ₦50,000 attract about ₦10 in bank fees plus a ₦50 levy. Transfers above ₦50,000 are capped at ₦50 in bank charges, with additional levies applied. Smaller transactions below ₦5,000 are deliberately priced lower to encourage digital adoption. Fintech platforms such as OPay and PalmPay have also aligned with these regulations, applying the ₦50 EMTL on qualifying inflows in compliance with federal tax rules. While these policies are designed to strengthen Nigeria’s cashless economy, they reveal a deeper tension between modernization and affordability.

Nigeria’s financial ecosystem is massive and rapidly digitizing. Data from the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System shows that Nigerians conduct approximately 700 to 800 million electronic transfers monthly, valued at between ₦88 trillion and ₦100 trillion. This translates to a monthly average of about 738 million transfers and a daily average of approximately 24.6 million transactions. Mobile app transfers alone exceed 5 billion annually, with daily values around ₦600 billion. This sheer volume underscores how central digital transfers have become to everyday life, from market payments to corporate settlements.

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A common misconception is that the CBN directly profits from transfer charges. In reality, the revenue structure is split across different stakeholders. Commercial banks retain service fees ranging from ₦10 to ₦50 per transfer, while the Federal Government collects the ₦50 stamp duty on qualifying transactions. The Central Bank of Nigeria primarily plays a regulatory role rather than a profit-taking one. Based on transaction patterns and fee structures, estimates suggest that banks generate about ₦516 million daily from fees, while stamp duty accounts for about ₦860 million. This brings total daily revenue to roughly ₦1.4 billion, rising to between ₦2 billion and ₦3 billion when higher-value transactions are included. On an annual basis, banks earn approximately ₦270 billion, while the government generates about ₦315 billion, bringing total system-wide charges to around ₦585 billion. These figures highlight a striking reality: Nigerians collectively pay over half a trillion naira each year in transfer-related charges.

The policy direction aims to deepen financial inclusion, improve transparency, and reduce reliance on cash. Transaction limits such as ₦500,000 weekly for individuals and ₦5 million for corporate accounts are designed to regulate liquidity and monitor financial flows. Similarly, POS and agent banking limits attempt to control cash circulation. However, these well-intentioned measures carry unintended consequences. Cost sensitivity discourages usage among low-income users, small businesses face cumulative transaction burdens, and consumers absorb rising indirect costs through higher prices. Moreover, high cumulative fees risk slowing the velocity of money, which is an essential driver of economic growth.

One of the most critical concerns is behavioral. When digital transactions become expensive, people begin to look for alternatives. In Nigeria, this often results in increased reliance on cash, informal savings systems, and reduced engagement with formal banking. This shift undermines years of progress in building a secure and traceable financial ecosystem. It also exposes individuals to higher risks, including theft and financial fraud.

With expanded levies and improved compliance, government earnings from electronic transaction taxes are projected to rise significantly. Estimates indicate revenues of ₦456.07 billion in 2026, ₦579.82 billion in 2027, and ₦752.45 billion in 2028. Revenue-sharing structures further distribute these funds across federal and state levels, embedding transfer charges as a key fiscal tool.

Nigeria stands at a delicate crossroads. The push toward a cashless economy is necessary, but sustainability depends on balancing efficiency with fairness. Lowering cumulative transaction costs for frequent users, introducing tiered or subsidized pricing for small businesses, enhancing transparency in how charges are applied, and leveraging fintech innovation to reduce operational costs are critical considerations. Without such adjustments, the system risks becoming counterproductive by discouraging the very digital participation it seeks to promote.

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Nigeria’s digital payment revolution is undeniable in both scale and ambition. Yet beneath the surface lies a quiet but powerful economic force: the cumulative weight of transfer charges. While individually small, these fees collectively reshape spending habits, business operations, and financial inclusion. The issue is not merely about cost; it is about balance. A system designed to drive progress must not inadvertently deepen inequality. As Nigeria continues its transition toward a fully digital economy, the challenge will be ensuring that efficiency does not come at the expense of accessibility, and that innovation remains aligned with the everyday realities of its people.

Daniel Nduka Okonkwo is a Nigerian investigative journalist, publisher of Profiles International Human Rights Advocate in collaboration with Daniels Entertainment, and a policy analyst whose work focuses on governance, institutional accountability, and political power. He is also a human rights activist, advocate, and journalist committed to promoting transparency, justice, and democratic principles. His reporting and analysis have been widely published across notable media platforms, including Sahara Reporters, African Defence Forum, Daily Trust Newspapers, Vanguard Newspaper, Daily Intel Newspapers, Opinion Nigeria, African Angle, Local Newsbreak, and other international outlets. He writes from Nigeria and can be reached at dan.okonkwo.73@gmail.com.

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