The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has announced plans to introduce “downloadable Permanent Voter Cards” for citizens whose original cards are lost, damaged, or unreadable, a key step in digitizing Nigeria’s voter identification system.
The disclosure came from INEC Chairman Prof. Joash Amupitan during a courtesy visit to the commission’s Abuja headquarters by the Director-General of the National Orientation Agency (NOA), Lanre Issa-Onilu, a meeting that appears to have doubled as a platform for outlining INEC’s broader technology roadmap ahead of the 2027 general elections.
Amupitan was careful to frame the initiative as a remedy for a specific, long-standing headache in Nigeria’s electoral logistics: the perennial problem of voters turning up at polling units with cards that are torn, faded beyond recognition, or simply missing rather than a wholesale reinvention of voter registration.
“It is not every PVC that is downloadable. You must have gotten your PVC before, and it must be that the PVC is lost or defaced, or if you cannot read your numbers there,” he said, drawing a clear line that excludes first-time registrants who never collected a physical card in the first place.
The process, notably, will not be instantaneous or on-demand. According to the new Electoral Act 2026, voters seeking a downloadable replacement must lodge a formal complaint, and that complaint must be made 90 days before the election to allow the commission time to print a replacement card.
That lead time suggests INEC is building in safeguards against last-minute abuse of the system, a nod, perhaps, to the fraud concerns that typically shadow any expansion of remote or digital access to voter credentials.
Rather than debuting the technology at the high-stakes 2027 presidential and National Assembly polls, INEC intends to trial it first at the off-cycle Osun State governorship election, scheduled for 15 August, a lower-risk environment where any technical kinks can be identified and ironed out.
Amupitan has indicated that voters granted downloadable PVCs would be able to use them not only in Osun but also in the Ekiti governorship election and eventually the 2027 general elections, suggesting the pilot is intended as a stepping stone toward permanent, nationwide adoption rather than a one-off experiment.
Perhaps the more far-reaching of the two announcements was INEC’s disclosure that it is close to testing a system that would allow eligible Nigerians to register as voters entirely online without the customary trip to an INEC local government office or registration centre for biometric capture.
“We have also been working on the technology that is going to make it possible for the registration of voters online without even having to visit INEC local government or registration areas,” Amupitan said, adding that testing could begin “in the next few days” pending internal approval.
If realised, this would mark a substantial departure from Nigeria’s current biometric-heavy registration regime, which has historically required physical presence to capture fingerprints and facial data, a requirement often cited as a barrier for citizens in remote areas, persons with disabilities, and Nigerians in the diaspora.
Notably, in a separate exchange, Amupitan cautioned against over-reliance on technology alone to deliver credible elections, arguing that even the most sophisticated Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) machines or an upgraded INEC Result Viewing Portal would count for little without sustained voter education and reorientation.
He specifically flagged the downloadable PVC rollout as an area requiring intensive public enlightenment, given the potential for confusion or misuse.
That caveat arrived against the backdrop of lingering disinformation battles the commission has had to fight, including viral claims that INEC had warehoused over 400,000 PVCs to benefit a particular political party during a recent off-cycle governorship election, which the commission said were later found to be party membership cards rather than voter cards.
Taken together, the two initiatives point to an INEC leadership keen to project a modernizing, tech-forward image heading into 2027, one aimed, in Amupitan’s words, at “eliminating the feeling of disenfranchisement among citizens” and ensuring that “everyone who desired to register could do so seamlessly.”
Whether the Osun pilot in August delivers on that promise or exposes fresh vulnerabilities in Nigeria’s electoral infrastructure is likely to shape how much trust voters place in the system when the far bigger test of the 2027 general elections arrives.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
INEC’s downloadable PVC initiative is a targeted fix, not a free-for-all. Only voters who already have a PVC that’s lost, damaged, or unreadable qualify, and they must file a complaint at least 90 days before an election to get one. First-time registrants without a prior card won’t be eligible.
The system will first be tested at the Osun governorship election in August before any wider rollout toward 2027, so voters should treat this as a pilot, not yet a nationwide guarantee, and pay attention to how it performs before relying on it.












