In a significant regulatory shift that acknowledges the transformative impact of digital financial services across Nigeria, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has formally upgraded the operating licenses of several leading FinTech companies and microfinance banks to national status, aligning their regulatory standing with their actual operational footprint.
The announcement, delivered by Mr. Yemi Solaja, Director of the Other Financial Institutions Supervision Department at the CBN, came during the annual conference of the Committee of Heads of Banks’ Operations held recently in Lagos. The move marks a pivotal moment in Nigeria’s evolving financial services sector, where technology-driven platforms have rapidly outgrown their original regulatory classifications.
Among the institutions confirmed to have received upgraded licenses are household names in Nigeria’s digital banking space: Moniepoint MFB, Opay, and Kuda Bank. These platforms, along with others operating under similar models, have collectively built massive user bases that extend far beyond the geographic limitations initially contemplated under their original unit, tier-one, or tier-two license frameworks.
“In reality, their activities are now all over the country,” Solaja explained to conference attendees, underscoring the disconnect that had emerged between licensing structures established years ago and the current market reality. “Most of their customers are informal people. They need to know where to report to when there is a problem.”
Bridging the Regulatory Gap
The license upgrades represent the CBN’s response to what had become an increasingly untenable situation: financial institutions with licenses authorizing operations in limited regions were, in practice, serving customers nationwide through mobile applications and extensive agent banking networks. This mismatch created not only a regulatory blind spot but also potential consumer protection concerns, particularly for users in the informal economy who form the backbone of these platforms’ customer bases.
The evolution has been rapid. FinTech companies and tech-enabled microfinance banks leveraged mobile technology and innovative agent banking models to expand at speeds traditional banks could never match. Platforms like Palmpay and others built on this model have fundamentally altered how millions of Nigerians—particularly those previously excluded from formal financial services—access banking.
However, Solaja made clear that the path to a national license is neither automatic nor without stringent requirements. “The upgrade process is not automatic,” he emphasized, noting that national licenses are granted only after institutions demonstrate they meet key regulatory benchmarks that ensure operational capacity, consumer protection mechanisms, and compliance infrastructure match their expanded scope.
Physical Presence in a Digital Age
In what may seem counterintuitive for digitally native institutions, the CBN is insisting that even these tech-driven platforms maintain physical presence in key areas across the country. This requirement reflects the regulator’s understanding of Nigeria’s diverse financial landscape, where digital sophistication exists alongside traditional banking preferences, particularly among informal sector participants.
“Physical branches help resolve disputes and serve informal sector customers who need face-to-face engagement,” according to the regulatory guidance. This hybrid approach—combining digital innovation with tangible touchpoints—aims to ensure that as these institutions serve increasingly diverse populations, no customer segment is left without recourse or support.
Many of the upgraded institutions already operate vast agent networks spanning rural and urban Nigeria, providing crucial financial infrastructure in areas that traditional banks have historically underserved or abandoned entirely. These agents handle everything from cash deposits and withdrawals to bill payments, effectively serving as the human interface for otherwise digital-first operations.
Strategic Imperatives: Financial Inclusion and Cash Management
During his address to the CHBOs conference, Solaja outlined a broader strategic vision that positions FinTech collaboration as essential to addressing two persistent challenges facing Nigeria’s financial system: the stubbornly high volume of cash circulating outside formal banking channels and the need to accelerate “Digital-First” banking operations.
The CBN sees the upgraded FinTech platforms as potential partners in tackling Nigeria’s cash-outside-banks problem—a longstanding issue that complicates monetary policy implementation, facilitates informal economic activity that escapes taxation, and creates security risks.
Given that these digital platforms have already demonstrated their ability to reach populations that traditional banks struggle to serve, the regulator appears to be betting that proper oversight and collaboration can channel their disruptive energy toward national financial policy objectives.
The push for deeper collaboration between commercial banks and FinTechs also signals recognition that the future of Nigerian banking is neither purely traditional nor exclusively digital, but rather an ecosystem where different players complement each other’s strengths.
Looking Ahead
This regulatory recalibration comes at a critical juncture for Nigeria’s financial sector. As the country continues its push toward greater financial inclusion—with millions still lacking access to formal banking services—the role of technology-enabled platforms has proven indispensable. The license upgrades represent the CBN’s acknowledgment that regulatory frameworks must evolve as rapidly as the innovations they seek to govern.
For the upgraded institutions, national status brings both validation and heightened responsibility. They must now operate under more rigorous oversight while maintaining the agility and customer-centricity that fueled their growth. For Nigerian consumers, particularly those in underserved communities, the development promises more robust consumer protection and clearer channels for dispute resolution.
As Nigeria’s financial landscape continues its digital transformation, the CBN’s move to align licensing with operational reality may well serve as a template for how regulators across emerging markets navigate the delicate balance between fostering innovation and ensuring stability in an increasingly digital financial world.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Central Bank of Nigeria has upgraded major FinTech platforms like Moniepoint, Opay, and Kuda Bank from limited regional licenses to full national status, finally matching their regulatory classification with their actual nationwide operations.
This move closes a critical gap where these digital banks were serving millions of customers across Nigeria while technically licensed for only limited areas. The upgrade ensures proper consumer protection—especially for informal sector users who need clear channels to resolve issues—while positioning these platforms as strategic partners in reducing cash outside the banking system and deepening financial inclusion.
Nigeria’s financial regulator is catching up with the digital banking revolution, bringing oversight in line with reality while maintaining both digital innovation and physical accountability.























