The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) granted full approval to 48 loan app companies that had previously been operating under conditional status, bringing the total number of fully licensed digital money lenders in the country to 505.
The move, reflected in the Commission’s latest updated registry of approved digital lenders, effectively clears the backlog of conditionally approved operators, a category that no longer exists on the Commission’s books.
It marks the most substantial single-batch upgrade of lender status since the FCCPC began its aggressive drive to sanitize one of Nigeria’s fastest-growing and most controversial financial sectors.
As recently as January of this year, the figure stood at 457 fully approved operators. The leap to 505 within months underscores the pace at which Nigeria’s consumer credit market is both expanding and, increasingly, submitting itself to regulatory oversight.
The numbers tell a compelling story of a sector in transition. Beyond the 505 fully approved operators, an additional 32 digital lenders have been granted registration waivers by the Commission, on the basis that they are already licensed by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), a recognition that regulatory jurisdiction in this space is layered and, at times, overlapping.
More striking still is the sheer breadth of the market’s operational footprint. Most registered companies do not operate a single app but several, pushing the total number of loan applications currently under the FCCPC’s supervision to well over 1,000. For a commission whose mandate stretches across every sector of the Nigerian economy, that figure alone raises serious questions about capacity.
Those concerns are sharpened by what sits on the margins of the regulated market. A total of 112 loan apps are currently on the Commission’s watchlist, flagged for potential violations or non-compliance.
A further 54 apps have already been deleted from the Google Play Store for breaching the regulator’s rules, a stark reminder that for every compliant operator, others are gaming the system or operating entirely outside it.
The surge in registered lenders is not coincidental. Industry observers link it directly to the implementation of the Digital, Electronic, Online, and Non-Traditional Consumer Lending Regulations, 2025, a landmark framework that, for the first time, makes registration with the FCCPC mandatory for all digital lenders operating in Nigeria.
The regulation represents the Commission’s most assertive intervention yet in a sector long plagued by predatory practices, from exorbitant interest rates and opaque loan terms to the egregious harassment of defaulting borrowers, including the public shaming of debtors through their own contact lists.
Chief among the FCCPC’s conditions for approval is adherence to ethical debt recovery standards, a direct rebuke of the loan shark culture that has tarnished the industry’s reputation.
The effect has been a flood of applications. Companies that once operated in regulatory grey zones or outright ignored oversight entirely are now seeking legitimacy, either to avoid sanctions or to gain a competitive edge in an increasingly compliance-conscious market.
Yet for all the progress the FCCPC has made in bringing order to the digital lending space, seasoned financial analysts warn that registration alone does not equal effective supervision.
“Don’t forget that the FCCPC’s mandate covers consumer protection across all sectors of the economy, and digital lending is just a minute part of it,” said Mr. Adewale Adeoye, a Lagos-based financial analyst with close knowledge of the sector. “Monitoring over 500 registered companies alone requires a lot of capacity, yet there are hundreds of others operating illegally that need to be dealt with.”
The 2025 regulations have also expanded the FCCPC’s regulatory reach beyond app-based lenders to include non-traditional digital lenders who do not operate through apps at all, broadening the Commission’s supervisory net at the very moment it is already stretched thin.
“The scope is widening while the resources remain finite,” Adeoye noted. “That is a structural challenge the Commission will need to confront squarely.”
The regulated lending community, for its part, appears to be extending goodwill to the Commission for now.
Mr. Gbemi Adelekan, president of the Money Lenders Association (MLA), echoed concerns about the scale of the commission’s oversight task, acknowledging that enforcement risks becoming “overwhelming” as the number of players continues to grow. But he was careful not to cast the FCCPC in an entirely unflattering light.
“The Commission has assured lenders that they are capable, and their response to industry issues has been swift so far.” It is a cautious vote of confidence, one that many in the industry will be watching closely to see whether it holds as the sector continues its rapid expansion.
Nigeria’s digital lending market is, by any measure, one of the most dynamic consumer finance ecosystems on the African continent. It fills a critical gap left by traditional banks, providing credit access to millions of Nigerians who lack the collateral, credit history, or proximity to brick-and-mortar financial institutions.
But that dynamism has a dark side, and the FCCPC knows it. The Commission’s growing database of approved lenders reflects genuine regulatory progress and a more orderly market than existed even two years ago.
The harder test, however, lies ahead: whether an agency with economy-wide responsibilities can meaningfully police more than 1,000 loan apps, chase down hundreds of illegal operators, and protect Nigerian consumers in real time all at once.
The numbers are moving in the right direction. Whether the Commission can keep pace with them is the defining question of Nigeria’s digital lending story in 2025 and beyond.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s digital lending sector has reached a regulatory landmark with 505 fully approved operators, signaling real progress in the FCCPC’s bid to clean up a market once notorious for predatory practices. However, the milestone risks becoming hollow if enforcement cannot match the scale of growth.
With over 1,000 loan apps to monitor, hundreds of illegal operators still active, and a commission already stretched across every sector of the economy, regulation on paper means little without the capacity to back it up. The numbers look good, but the harder work is just beginning.















