Techsoma Africa
Latest Startups FinTech AI Tech Global Apps Opinions Events
Policy & Regulations Artificial Intelligence Reports About Contact Advertise African Startup Ecosystem FinTech & Digital Money Artificial Intelligence Technology Global News Apps, Gadgets, Tools & Softwares Opinions & Perspectives Event Radar Africa
Techsoma Africa
No Result
View All Result
Techsoma Africa
No Result
View All Result
Techsoma Africa
No Result
View All Result
Home Business & Markets

CBN licence upgrade grants OPay, Moniepoint, others national status

by Faith Amonimo
January 29, 2026
in Business & Markets, FinTech & Digital Money, Technology
Reading Time: 5 mins read
Techsoma Africa

The Central Bank of Nigeria has granted national operating licences to OPay, Moniepoint, Kuda, and other fintech companies. The CBN fintech licence upgrade addresses a growing gap between where these platforms were allowed to work and where they actually serve customers.

For years, companies like OPay and Moniepoint operated with regional or state-level permissions. Their mobile apps and agent networks reached customers in every state, but their licences did not match this reality. The CBN noticed this mismatch and decided to formalise what was already happening on the ground.

Yemi Solaja, director of the Other Financial Institutions Supervision Department at the CBN, announced the licence upgrades during the annual Committee of Heads of Banks Operations conference in Lagos on January 23, 2026. He explained that the CBN fintech licence upgrade brings these fast-growing companies under proper nationwide regulation.

The CBN fintech licence upgrade affects major players in Nigeria’s digital finance space. Moniepoint Microfinance Bank, OPay, Kuda Bank, PalmPay, and Paga now hold national licences. These companies can legally operate in all 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory without restrictions.

Before this change, many fintechs held unit or state-level licences. These permits limited where they could officially conduct business. Despite these limits, the platforms built customer bases nationwide through mobile apps and thousands of agents.

Solaja told attendees at the Lagos conference that many institutions had outgrown their original licences. “Institutions like Moniepoint MFB, Opay, Kuda Bank and others have already been upgraded. In reality, their activities are now all over the country,” he said during his presentation.

The CBN fintech licence upgrade matches official permissions with actual operations, giving the central bank better oversight of how these companies work.

Companies must also meet stricter compliance and reporting standards. The central bank will monitor their operations more closely than before. This includes regular audits, financial disclosures, and performance reports to track stability risks across the financial system.

The CBN requires institutions to establish physical branches or service centres in key locations. Digital platforms must now maintain offices where customers can walk in for support. This requirement addresses concerns about customers who need face-to-face help with disputes or transaction problems.

Solaja emphasised this point at the conference, noting that many fintech customers operate in the informal economy. “Most of their customers are informal people. They need to know where to report to when there is a problem,” he explained.

This brings consumer protection benefits alongside new requirements. Physical branches mean customers have somewhere to go when things go wrong. Transaction reversals, complaint handling, and dispute resolution should improve with in-person support options.

National oversight also means tighter monitoring of data protection and cybersecurity. As these platforms handle more customer information across all states, the CBN will pay closer attention to how they protect personal and financial data.

The central bank can impose stricter penalties for violations under national licences. Companies face potential fines, operational restrictions, or even licence withdrawal if they breach regulations. This creates stronger incentives to follow the rules.

The changes also distinguish licensed platforms from smaller, unregulated operators. Customers can identify which companies have met CBN standards for capital, compliance, and consumer protection. This clarity helps users make informed choices about where to keep their money.

Despite the upgrade, these fintechs remain distinct from commercial banks. They operate as microfinance banks or payment service providers with specific licence categories. They cannot offer all the services that deposit money banks provide, such as foreign exchange services or certain types of lending.

Faith Amonimo

Faith Amonimo

Moyo Faith Amonimo is a Tech Writer and Newsletter Editor at Techsoma Africa, where she reports on technology and digital...

Recommended For You

Xoom and Flutterwave
FinTech & Digital Money

Flutterwave Partners With PayPal’s Xoom to Speed Up Nigeria Money Transfers

by Kingsley Okeke
July 9, 2026

Flutterwave has partnered with Xoom, PayPal's international money transfer service, to enable faster transfers into Nigerian bank accounts. The deal connects Xoom's global remittance network with Flutterwave's local payout infrastructure,...

Read moreDetails
Techsoma Africa

Djamo Raises $17M to Deepen Financial Inclusion in Francophone Africa

July 8, 2026
Techsoma Africa

Flutterwave Secures Circle Ventures Investment to Scale USDC Settlement

July 8, 2026

Zeepay CEO Personally Owes $11.6M After Ghana Court Ruling

July 8, 2026

When Profitability Is Not Enough: What FoodCourt’s Shutdown Teaches Nigerian Businesses

July 7, 2026
Next Post
Meta Announces Premium Paid Features Coming to Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp

Meta Announces Paid Features Coming to Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp

Paypal

Too Little, Too Late? PayPal's Belated African Expansion Reeks of Desperation

Please login to join discussion

Browse by Category

  • African Startup Ecosystem
  • African Telecommunications
  • Apps, Gadgets, Tools & Softwares
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Business & Markets
  • Creator Economy
  • Cybersecurity
  • Digital Work-Life Series
  • E-Commerce
  • Event Radar Africa
  • Exclusive Interviews
  • Explainers
  • Fabfilter Total Bundle
  • Features/Spotlights
  • FinTech & Digital Money
  • Funding news
  • GenZ Desk!
  • Global News
  • Logistics & Mobility Tech
  • Marvel Rivals Nude Mod
  • Media & Entertainment
  • News
  • Opinions & Perspectives
  • Opportunities, Careers & Learning
  • Partner
  • Policy & Regulations
  • Reports
  • Reviews
  • Tech Insights for Creators
  • Technology
  • Thought Leadership
  • Uncategorized
  • About Us
  • Advertise on Techsoma
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Publish Your Articles
  • T & C
  • Techsoma Africa

Copyright 2026 Techsoma Africa. All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Techsoma Africa

© 2026 Techsoma Africa Media.

Company

Policy AI Reports About Contact Advertise

Legal

Terms Privacy RSS

Latest

Flutterwave Partners With PayPal’s Xoom to Speed Up Nigeria Money Transfers Flutterwave has partnered with Xoom, PayPal's international money transfer service, to enable faster transfers into Nigerian bank accounts.... EMERGE Launches Career Acceleration Platform for Africa’s Young Professionals   TheBoardroom Africa has launched EMERGE, a new digital career acceleration platform built to help young African professionals... Why African Startups Are Choosing Debt Over Equity in 2026 For years, the startup playbook was simple: raise equity, give up a slice of your company, grow. In 2026, more African startups are borrowing instead. Debt financing has caught up to equity across the continent, and the shift reveals which companies investors trust to repay versus which ones they're still betting on to grow.
No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Advertise on Techsoma
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Publish Your Articles
  • T & C
  • Techsoma Africa

Copyright 2026 Techsoma Africa. All rights reserved.