Techsoma Homepage
  • African FutureTech
  • Investor Hotspots
  • Reports
  • African FutureTech
  • Investor Hotspots
  • Reports
Home FinTech & Digital Money

The Compliance Tax is Dropping: Inside the CBN’s New Strategic Playbook

by Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola
February 2, 2026
in FinTech & Digital Money
Reading Time: 4 mins read
CBN Fintech Report 2025

For the Nigerian fintech founder, the cost of doing business has historically been measured in more than just server costs or customer acquisition. It is measured in a “compliance tax”—the 12-month wait times for product approvals and the massive overhead required to navigate a fragmented regulatory landscape.

The Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) 2025 Fintech Report marks a significant shift in posture. The document moves away from the traditional “gatekeeper” model toward a framework built on “co-creation” and shared infrastructure.

CBN Fintech Report 2025

For founders, this isn’t just a policy update; it is a roadmap to lower burn rates and faster scaling.

1. The Regional Hub: Regulatory Passporting

Scaling a fintech across Africa has traditionally meant starting from scratch in every new jurisdiction. The CBN is now moving to eliminate this friction through Regulatory Passporting.

  • The Strategy: The Bank plans to pilot bilateral agreements with peer regulators in Ghana, Kenya, and Senegal.

  • The Impact: This framework aims for the mutual recognition of licenses. If you are compliant in Nigeria, the goal is for your license to serve as a “passport,” streamlining entry into East and West African corridors.

2. Operational Efficiency: Compliance-as-a-Service (CaaS)

The report acknowledges that 87.5% of fintech firms find compliance costs significantly hamper their capacity to innovate. To solve this, the CBN is proposing a shared utility model: Compliance-as-a-Service.

  • The Strategy: A centralized SupTech (Supervisory Technology) platform to handle reporting and AML/CFT requirements.

  • The Impact: By outsourcing high-frequency compliance tasks to a shared utility, early-stage startups can reduce their legal and regulatory overhead, allowing capital to be redirected toward product development.

3. Peak-Season Resilience: A New Infrastructure Standard

The report specifically addresses the service interruptions that plague the ecosystem during peak transaction periods, such as the December holiday surge.

  • The Strategy: A transition to a Hybrid Infrastructure Model that federates innovation layers to private operators while maintaining core settlement under the CBN.

  • The Impact: The Bank is proposing enforceable Service Level Agreements (SLAs) and real-time status dashboards. This move is designed to stabilize the payments rail during high-velocity periods, ensuring consumer trust isn’t eroded by preventable downtime.

4. The Lending Pivot: Digital Banking vs. PSBs

The Payment Service Bank (PSB) model has long been criticized by founders for its inability to lend, which limits the scope for true financial inclusion.

  • The Strategy: The CBN is now assessing a Consolidated Digital Banking License as a more scalable alternative to the PSB framework.

  • The Impact: This signals a shift toward allowing fintechs to provide credit and savings services under a unified, risk-adjusted framework, bypassing the restrictive ownership and operational structures of the PSB model

The 90-Day Roadmap: What Founders Should Track

The CBN has outlined immediate priorities for Phase 1 (0–3 months) of this implementation:

  1. Institutional Dialogue: The launch of a Standing Fintech Engagement Forum to replace one-way circulars with two-way consultation.

  2. Open Banking Implementation: The release of a formal roadmap to move open banking from theory to operational reality.

  3. Regulatory Portal: The technical scoping for a Single Regulatory Window to centralize all licensing and supervisory processes.

The 2025 roadmap suggests a regulator that has realized its own success is tied to the velocity of the startups it oversees. For the first time, the “rule-setter” is looking to build the platform, not just the fence.

Download the Full Report. Gain deeper insights into the future of Nigerian fintech. You can access the complete Central Bank of Nigeria policy document here

ADVERTISEMENT
Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola

Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola

Covenant Aladenola is part of Techsoma’s senior editorial team, where he helps shape the publication’s storytelling direction and editorial strategy...

Recommended For You

CBN licence upgrade grants OPay, Moniepoint, others national status
Business & Markets

CBN licence upgrade grants OPay, Moniepoint, others national status

by Faith Amonimo
January 29, 2026

The Central Bank of Nigeria has upgraded operating licences for OPay, Moniepoint, Kuda, and other fintech platforms to national status, requiring N5 billion in capital and physical branches across the...

Read moreDetails
Paga-Paypal

PayPal Finally Returns to Nigeria After 22-Year Restriction Through Paga Deal

January 27, 2026
Paystack Forms New Holding Company, The Stack Group, as It Expands Beyond Payments

Paystack Forms New Holding Company, The Stack Group, as It Expands Beyond Payments

January 20, 2026
Paystack and Flutterwave logos connected by digital infrastructure map, symbolizing the acquisition of Ladder Microfinance Bank and Mono.

Paystack and Flutterwave: The End of the Gateway Era and the Battle for the Vault

January 14, 2026
Taiwo Oyedele Tax Reforms for Nigeria

Nigeria’s Battle Against Tax Evasion: How Banks and Fintechs Will Become Tax Enforcers in 2026

January 6, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Recent News

CBN Fintech Report 2025

The Compliance Tax is Dropping: Inside the CBN’s New Strategic Playbook

February 2, 2026
Nigerian content creators share their massive payouts from X’s Revenue Program

Nigerian content creators share their massive payouts from X’s Revenue Program

February 2, 2026
Tech Revolution Africa 2.0 and the Big Bold Step From Ambition to Execution in African Tech

Tech Revolution Africa 2.0 and the Big Bold Step From Ambition to Execution in African Tech

February 2, 2026
Moniepoint 10th Anniversary

10 Years of Moniepoint: How the Invisible Infrastructure Rose to the Frontline

February 2, 2026
Nigerian Telecom Data prices are not affordable

Inside Nigeria’s N7.7 Billion Telecom Heist

February 1, 2026

Where Africa’s Tech Revolution Begins – Covering tech innovations, startups, and developments across Africa

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Quick Links

Advertise on Techsoma

Publish your Articles

T & C

Privacy Policy

© 2025 — Techsoma Africa. All Rights Reserved

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.