The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) has reported a significant ₦40 billion reduction in electricity subsidy obligations for the final quarter of 2025.
According to NERC’s 2025 Q4 Quarterly Report, the government’s subsidy burden dropped to ₦418.79 billion, representing an 8.71% decrease from the ₦458.75 billion recorded in the preceding quarter.
While the government continues to shoulder over half of the generation costs, the latest data suggests a strategic pivot toward a more self-sustaining energy market.
The primary catalyst for this fiscal relief appears to be a deliberate shift in energy allocation. NERC attributed the subsidy decline to the government’s decision to increase energy supply to Band A customers—those receiving at least 20 hours of power daily—from 40% to 45%.
Because Band A tariffs are closer to market reality, the increased volume of power sold to these high-priority consumers effectively reduced the “tariff gap” that the government must bridge. Consequently, government subsidy as a percentage of total Generation Company (GenCo) invoices fell from 58.63% in Q3 to 52.30% in Q4.
For the uninitiated, the subsidy isn’t a direct cash injection to the distribution companies (DisCos). Instead, it is administered via the Differential Remittance Obligation (DRO).
“In the absence of cost-reflective tariffs, the government undertakes to cover the resultant gap… the subsidy is only applied to the generation cost payable by DisCos to NBET at source,” the NERC report clarified.
Essentially, the DRO acts as a “discounted bill” sent by the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc (NBET) to the DisCos, reflecting only what the current allowed tariffs can realistically cover.
Despite the reduced subsidy burden, the industry saw a slight dip in overall remittance performance. In Q4, DisCos remitted ₦359.27 billion (93.04%) of their adjusted invoices, compared to a 95.23% performance in Q3.
A look at the eleven DisCos reveals a sharp divide in financial discipline: Abuja, Eko, Enugu, Ikeja, and Port Harcourt (ALL 100%), Yola (99.42%), Benin (98.30%), Ibadan (95.58%), Kano (75.14%), Jos (49.80%), and Kaduna (40.73%)
While Benin and Kaduna showed marginal improvements in their payment discipline, Kano and Jos saw alarming double-digit declines in their remittance to the national grid.
While the ₦40 billion savings are a victory for the Ministry of Finance, the sector remains heavily reliant on state support. With the government still paying for one out of every two megawatts generated, the pressure remains on NERC and the DisCos to improve collection efficiencies and expand the Band A framework to eventually achieve a fully “cost-reflective” market.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Federal Government successfully shaved ₦40 billion off its electricity subsidy bill in Q4 2025 by prioritizing power supply to Band A customers.
By increasing energy allocation to those paying higher, market-aligned rates, the government reduced its “gap-filling” obligation from 58% to 52% of total generation costs.
While five DisCos maintained perfect payment records, the sector’s long-term health still hinges on moving toward a cost-reflective tariff to fully eliminate the need for these massive multi-billion naira interventions.




















