Nigeria’s financial sector faces a major transformation as the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has issued stringent new requirements that will fundamentally reshape how electronic payments operate across the country’s banking ecosystem.
In a directive that underscores the apex bank’s commitment to modernizing Nigeria’s payment infrastructure, all financial institutions and payment service providers have been given until October 31, 2025, to complete migration to the ISO 20022 messaging standard while simultaneously implementing mandatory geo-tagging of all payment terminals.
The comprehensive circular, signed by Dr. Rakiya O. Yusuf, Director of the Payments System Supervision Department, represents one of the most significant regulatory moves in Nigeria’s payments sector in recent years. The mandate affects a broad spectrum of financial entities, including Deposit Money Banks, Microfinance Banks, Mobile Money Operators, and various payment service providers.
Aligning with Global Standards
The timing of Nigeria’s ISO 20022 adoption is particularly strategic, coinciding with SWIFT’s global migration timeline that has seen major financial markets worldwide transitioning to this enhanced messaging format. ISO 20022 represents a significant upgrade from legacy payment messaging systems, offering richer data content and improved interoperability across different financial networks.
“This move positions Nigeria firmly within the global financial mainstream,” explains the rationale behind the CBN’s directive. The new standard will enable Nigerian financial institutions to exchange more detailed transaction information, including comprehensive payer and payee identifiers, merchant details, and enhanced transaction metadata.
The implications extend beyond mere technical compliance. For Nigeria’s increasingly digital economy, the adoption of ISO 20022 could facilitate smoother international trade transactions, improve cross-border payment processing, and enhance the country’s integration with global financial networks.
Combating Fraud Through Location Technology
Perhaps equally significant is the CBN’s mandate for geo-tagging all payment terminals—a move clearly designed to address the persistent challenge of payment fraud that has plagued Nigeria’s electronic payment landscape. Under the new requirements, every payment terminal must be equipped with native geolocation services powered by double-frequency GPS receivers.
The technical specifications are notably precise: terminals must operate on Android OS version 10 or higher and must be registered with Payment Terminal Service Aggregators with exact latitude and longitude coordinates tied to specific merchant locations. This level of granularity suggests the CBN is serious about creating a comprehensive mapping system for all electronic payment activities across the country.
The fraud prevention aspect becomes clear in the mandate that geolocation data must be captured with every transaction and included in message payloads. This creates an audit trail that could significantly complicate fraudulent activities while providing regulators with unprecedented visibility into payment patterns across Nigeria.
Industry Scrambles to Meet Deadline
With the October 31 deadline fast approaching, financial institutions and payment service providers face a significant implementation challenge. The 60-day window for geo-tagging existing terminals, coupled with the requirement that all new terminals must be geo-tagged before certification, creates immediate operational pressures for the industry.
The CBN has made clear that compliance is non-negotiable, with validation exercises set to commence on October 20, 2025—giving institutions just 11 days of buffer time before the final deadline. This compressed timeline suggests the central bank is determined to avoid the delays that have historically characterized major technology implementations in Nigeria’s banking sector.
For payment service providers, the implications are particularly acute. The requirement that terminals not routed through approved Payment Terminal Service Aggregators will be prohibited from processing transactions could force significant restructuring of existing payment networks.
Broader Economic Implications
This regulatory overhaul comes at a critical time for Nigeria’s digital economy. As the country continues to drive financial inclusion through mobile money and digital payment platforms, the enhanced standards could provide the robust infrastructure necessary to support further growth while maintaining security and regulatory oversight.
The move also signals Nigeria’s ambition to position itself as a leader in financial technology across Africa. By adopting international standards ahead of many regional peers, Nigeria could strengthen its position as a hub for cross-border payments and digital financial services across the continent.
However, the success of this ambitious timeline will largely depend on the industry’s ability to mobilize resources quickly and the CBN’s capacity to provide adequate support during the transition period. With validation exercises beginning in less than two months, the next few weeks will be critical in determining whether Nigeria’s payment sector can successfully navigate this comprehensive transformation.
The stakes are high: failure to meet the October deadline could result in significant disruptions to Nigeria’s electronic payment ecosystem, while successful implementation could establish a new benchmark for payment system modernization across emerging markets.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s Central Bank has given all financial institutions and payment providers until October 31, 2025, to complete two major changes: adopt the global ISO 20022 payment messaging standard and install GPS tracking on all payment terminals.























