The Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) has opened another chapter in its long-running clean-up of Nigeria’s corporate register, this time placing 100,000 companies on notice of imminent deregistration for failing to meet their statutory filing obligations.
In a public notice dated Wednesday, July 15, and signed by its management, the Commission confirmed it had compiled a list of 100,000 companies which it has reasonable cause to believe are not carrying on business.
The exercise, which industry watchers have tagged “Batch Six,” is anchored in law: the CAC invoked sections 692(3) and (4) of the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) 2020, the statutory provision that empowers the registrar to strike off companies it believes have ceased operations or fallen out of compliance.
Under the terms of the notice, firms named on the list are being handed a final window to put their affairs in order.
The Commission is asking them to file all outstanding annual returns and other statutory documents and, notably, to submit information on Persons with Significant Control (PSC), also known as beneficial ownership details, a requirement that has taken on greater weight in recent years as Nigeria works to tighten its anti-money-laundering and beneficial-ownership disclosure framework in line with global standards.
Companies have been given 90 days from the date of the notice to regularize their status. Affected businesses can check whether their names appear on the list via the Commission’s official website and are expected to forward evidence of compliance to CAC’s designated email address once filings are complete.
The Commission left little room for ambiguity about the consequences of inaction, warning that companies that fail to comply within the stipulated timeline shall be struck off the register without further notice.
The consequences of being struck off are more than cosmetic. Once a company is formally delisted, it is deemed dissolved in the eyes of the law, meaning it can no longer lawfully conduct business, and third parties transacting with a struck-off entity risk falling foul of the law themselves.
Reversing that outcome is not a simple administrative fix either restoration to the register typically requires an order of the Federal High Court, a costly and time-consuming process that underscores why the Commission is urging affected firms to act within the grace period rather than after the fact.
This is not CAC’s first strike-off drive, and the numbers suggest the commission has been running an unusually aggressive compliance campaign over the past 18 months. Back in February this year, the Commission issued a similar notice of plans to delist 100,000 companies from its register over prolonged inactivity and non-compliance with statutory requirements under CAMA.
Before that, in 2025 alone, the Commission said it had deregistered over 400,000 companies, citing prolonged inactivity and failure to meet statutory compliance requirements.
Taken together, the figures point to a sustained regulatory push rather than a one-off exercise, with the latest batch pushing the cumulative tally of companies scrutinized or removed toward well over half a million in less than two years.
The Commission has consistently framed the exercise as good housekeeping rather than punitive action. It says the drive forms part of efforts to clean up the national companies’ register and strengthen confidence in Nigeria’s corporate regulatory framework, arguing that stripping out dormant and non-compliant entities protects the integrity of the register.
CAC has also stressed that the exercise forms part of its regulatory mandate to maintain an accurate and up-to-date register of companies operating in Nigeria and reiterated its commitment to efficient registration services alongside firm enforcement of compliance obligations.
Analysts see the recurring strike-off campaigns as double-edged. On one hand, a leaner, more accurate register makes Nigeria’s corporate space easier for investors, banks, and law enforcement to navigate, particularly the beneficial-ownership push, which speaks directly to concerns about opacity, money laundering, and terrorism financing that have drawn international scrutiny.
On the other hand, there are concerns that some small and micro-enterprises, many of which may simply lack the resources or awareness to keep up with annual filing obligations, could be swept up in a process aimed primarily at truly dormant shell companies.
For now, the message from CAC’s headquarters is unambiguous: with the 90-day clock already running, business owners whose companies feature on the newly published list have a narrow window to act or risk losing their corporate existence altogether.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The CAC has given 100,000 companies a strict 90-day deadline (from July 15) to file all outstanding annual returns and beneficial ownership (PSC) information or be struck off the register automatically, with no further warning.
Business owners should check the CAC website immediately to see if their company is on the list, since deregistration means the company is legally dissolved, can no longer operate, and can only be restored through a costly Federal High Court order.
This is CAC’s sixth such enforcement round, part of a broader pattern that has already seen over 400,000 companies delisted in 2025 alone so the risk is real, not routine.






















