The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has instructed commercial banks to clamp down on additional lending to high-value borrowers saddled with non-performing loans (NPLs).
The directive, contained in an official letter dated March 12, 2026, and addressed to all banks, was signed by Dr. Olubukola Akinwunmi, Director of Banking Supervision.
It marks the latest in a series of regulatory interventions as the apex bank seeks to enforce stricter credit discipline amid the final stretch of the industry-wide recapitalization exercise, which concludes on March 31.
According to the CBN, any borrower whose facilities have been classified as non-performing and duly recorded in the Credit Risk Management System (CRMS) or flagged by any licensed private credit bureau will immediately lose eligibility for fresh credit facilities.
The restriction targets “large-ticket” exposures, typically corporate or high-net-worth loans running into hundreds of millions of naira that have slipped into distress.
The regulator’s stated goal is twofold: to safeguard overall financial system stability and to instill a culture of repayment among borrowers who have grown accustomed to rolling over bad debts across institutions. “This is not punitive,” one senior banking source familiar with the circular told this reporter on condition of anonymity. “It is preventive. We cannot afford another wave of serial defaults that could erode the capital buffers banks have just spent the last two years rebuilding.”
The timing is hardly coincidental. Nigeria’s banking sector is emerging from an intense recapitalization drive that has seen most institutions raise fresh equity to meet the CBN’s new minimum capital thresholds.
While the system is widely described as “sound and resilient,” pockets of stress remain. Recent macroeconomic outlooks have highlighted rising NPL ratios in some segments, with estimates suggesting the industry average has edged above the 5% prudential limit in certain quarters as post-forbearance realities bite.
The CRMS, the CBN’s central credit repository, and licensed credit bureaus now form the backbone of this enforcement. Banks are already required to run real-time checks before approving any new facility. Under the new rule, a red flag in either system will automatically disqualify the borrower from additional credit unless exceptional circumstances are cleared at the highest level.
Industry analysts say the measure will have far-reaching ripple effects. For corporate borrowers in oil and gas, infrastructure, and trade finance sectors that rely heavily on large-ticket facilities, the door to fresh working capital or refinancing could slam shut until existing NPLs are regularized. This could force distressed companies to accelerate asset sales, seek equity injections, or enter formal restructuring talks.
On the flip side, bankers welcome the clarity. “It levels the playing field,” said a risk management executive at one of the tier-1 banks. “Previously, a defaulter could simply walk across the street to another lender under a different corporate name. That loophole is now closed.”
The directive also serves as a strong reminder of the CBN’s broader reform agenda under Governor Olayemi Cardoso. With the banking recapitalization largely complete and fresh stress-testing exercises scheduled to begin in April, the apex bank is signaling zero tolerance for practices that could undermine the hard-won gains in asset quality and capital adequacy.
For ordinary customers and smaller borrowers, the impact should be minimal; the focus is squarely on large exposures. However, the move underscores a new reality in Nigerian banking: credit is no longer an entitlement, it is a privilege earned through disciplined repayment.
As the letter lands on the desks of bank CEOs this week, compliance teams are already scrambling to update internal credit policies and flag affected accounts. The CBN has not yet detailed specific sanctions for non-compliance, but history suggests swift and severe penalties ranging from hefty provisioning requirements to broader regulatory sanctions for institutions that flout such directives.
In the coming days, market watchers will be keen to see how quickly banks adjust their lending pipelines and whether this fresh crackdown helps drive the NPL ratio back firmly below the 5% threshold.
For now, one message is crystal clear from the apex bank: in Nigeria’s reformed banking landscape, defaulting on a large loan is no longer just a private embarrassment; it is a barrier to future credit across the entire system.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Central Bank of Nigeria has drawn a firm line: if you are a large-ticket borrower with a non-performing loan recorded in the CRMS or any licensed credit bureau, you will no longer be able to access any additional credit facilities from Nigerian banks.
The CBN’s March 12, 2026, directive is a clear signal: credit is a privilege tied to repayment discipline, and the apex bank is determined to enforce it to protect the stability of Nigeria’s financial system.
























