The Debt Management Office has commenced subscriptions for the January 2026 tranche of Federal Government of Nigeria Savings Bonds, with yields climbing to as high as 15.396% per annum as Abuja continues leveraging elevated interest rates to attract domestic capital while providing inflation-beating returns to retail investors.
The five-day subscription window, which opened on Monday, January 13, offers two instruments: a 2-year bond maturing on January 21, 2028, at 14.396% per annum, and a 3-year bond maturing on January 21, 2029, at the headline rate of 15.396%. Subscriptions close Thursday, January 16, with settlement scheduled for January 21.
The latest issuance represents a notable uptick from the December 2025 offer, where the comparable 2-year and 3-year instruments were priced at 13.565% and 14.565%, respectively—an increase of approximately 83 basis points across both tenors. This upward trajectory mirrors broader trends in Nigeria’s fixed-income market, where persistent inflationary pressures and tight monetary policy have kept yields elevated throughout 2025, with some DMO auctions approaching 18% per annum.
“These are government-backed instruments offering double-digit returns in an environment where traditional savings vehicles are delivering negative real returns,” noted market observers familiar with the domestic debt landscape. “For risk-averse investors, particularly pensioners and salaried workers seeking predictable income streams, this represents one of the more compelling opportunities available.”
The bonds are structured with accessibility in mind. Priced at ₦1,000 per unit, the minimum subscription is ₦5,000, with subsequent investments in increments of ₦1,000 up to a maximum of ₦50 million per individual investor. Coupon payments will be distributed quarterly—on April 21, July 21, October 21, and January 21 each year until maturity—providing regular cash flow for income-focused portfolios.
Critically, the instruments carry the full faith and credit guarantee of the Federal Government, positioning them among the safest available options in Nigeria’s domestic capital markets. The bonds are also listed on the Nigerian Exchange Limited, affording investors secondary market liquidity should early exit become necessary before maturity dates.
Tax treatment further enhances their appeal: interest income remains exempt for qualifying investors, including pension funds and trustees operating under the Trustee Investment Act, effectively boosting after-tax yields compared to taxable alternatives.
The FGN Savings Bond program forms a key pillar of the Federal Government’s domestic resource mobilization strategy, aimed at deepening local debt markets while channeling household savings into productive government financing. By targeting retail participants—though institutional investors remain eligible—the DMO seeks to broaden the investor base beyond the traditional dominance of banks and pension administrators in the sovereign debt market.
The timing of the January offer comes as Nigeria continues navigating a challenging macroeconomic landscape characterized by stubborn inflation and currency pressures, conditions that have kept the Central Bank of Nigeria’s policy rate elevated and sustained appetite for high-yielding fixed-income securities across investor classes.
For prospective subscribers, the current rates present a calculated trade-off: locking in mid-teen percentage returns over multi-year horizons in exchange for exposure to sovereign credit risk and the opportunity cost of potential rate movements. With inflation remaining a primary concern for policymakers and households alike, the bonds’ ability to preserve purchasing power while delivering nominal gains positions them as a defensive allocation within diversified portfolios.
Applications can be submitted through authorized dealing members and financial institutions accredited by the DMO, with final allotments expected to be announced following the close of the subscription period later this week.
As of press time, the DMO had not disclosed subscription targets for the January issuance, though recent auctions have consistently demonstrated robust demand for government paper amid limited alternative safe-haven assets in the domestic market.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Nigerian government is offering savings bonds with attractive returns of up to 15.396% per annum—significantly higher than December’s rates—through a five-day subscription window closing January 16, 2026.
These government-guaranteed instruments require only a ₦5,000 minimum investment, pay quarterly interest that’s tax-exempt for eligible investors, and can be traded on the Nigerian Exchange if needed.
For Nigerians seeking safe, inflation-beating returns amid the current high-interest environment, this represents one of the most accessible and secure investment opportunities available, backed by the full faith of the Federal Government with substantially better yields than traditional savings accounts.























