Audio By Carbonatix
Nigeria's central bank announced sweeping changes to its cash management policies on Tuesday, introducing stricter withdrawal limits and scrapping fees on excess deposits in a bid to curb cash dependency and tackle security and money-laundering risks.
Effective January 1, 2026, individuals will be limited to cumulative weekly withdrawals of 500,000 naira and corporates 5 million naira, the Central Bank of Nigeria said in a circular to banks and financial institutions.
Withdrawals above these thresholds will attract fees of 3% for individuals and 5% for corporates.
The move marks the latest step in Nigeria's long-running push toward a cashless economy, following years of policy adjustments and enforcement challenges.
"The measures aim to moderate the rising cost of cash management, address security concerns and reduce the potential for money laundering," the CBN said.
In October, Nigeria and South Africa, sub-Saharan Africa's two largest economies, were removed from the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF) list of countries subject to increased monitoring for illicit money flows.
Special authorisations for large monthly withdrawals of 5 million naira for individuals and 10 million naira for corporates have been scrapped, and exemptions for embassies and donor agencies removed. However, government revenue accounts and certain financial institutions will remain exempt.
Banks must report transactions above the limits and maintain separate ledgers for charges collected, the circular added.
Latest Stories
-
Kwame Dadzie: Don’t spend government’s GH¢5 million to film sector
18 minutes -
Former Accra Mayor Blankson endorses Wontumi for NPP national chairmanship
1 hour -
Eid festivals explained on Behind The Lens with Queen Liz
1 hour -
Meet Emelia Naa Ayeley Aryee, the Ghanaian Gender Advocate helping couples overcome infertility stigma
2 hours -
Oil pulls back as traders look for progress on US-Iran talks
2 hours -
The proposed imposition of a 0.75% fee on Mobile Money-To-Bank transfers raises serious concerns regarding fairness, financial inclusion, and the underlying principle of interoperability within the digital financial ecosystem
3 hours -
Trump raises refugee ceiling by 10,000 to bring in more white South Africans
3 hours -
One killed and others missing after chemical explosion at US paper mill
3 hours -
First Ghanaians set to be repatriated from South Africa over anti-immigrant protests
3 hours -
Deliver or be questioned – Majority Chief Whip warns OSP
3 hours -
Crime is everywhere – Dafeamekpor slams OSP’s Accra-centred operations
3 hours -
Don’t be cocooned in Accra – Dafeamekpor pushes OSP to invade districts
4 hours -
Free sanitary pads and pad bank Initiative cut teenage pregnancy in Bosomtwe – Girl Child coordinator
4 hours -
Asunafo North Municipal Assembly deploys DL-Rev Software to tackle revenue shortfall
4 hours -
General Mosquito promised to ‘annihilate’ NPP – Dafeamekpor reveals details of earlier tour
4 hours