Tag: payments

  • Banks begin passing ₦50 stamp duty on eligible transfers to senders under tax changes

    Banks begin passing ₦50 stamp duty on eligible transfers to senders under tax changes

    Reporting by Leadership indicates banks are shifting the ₦50 stamp duty charge on qualifying electronic transfers (notably above a stated threshold) to senders, aligning with changes in the tax regime.

    The development affects how customers perceive transfer costs and could influence behaviour—some may bundle transactions or switch to alternative payment rails to minimise charges.

    Industry analysts say clearer disclosure is essential, as hidden or inconsistent charges can damage trust and push users back toward cash.

    Regulators will be watching implementation consistency across banks and consumer-protection compliance, including dispute resolution for wrongly applied charges.

    Echotitbits take: Small charges scale quickly. Watch for uniform application, clear customer notices, and whether fees trigger a shift to wallets/USSD alternatives—or a return to cash.

    Source: The Punch – https://punchng.com/banks-to-charge-%E2%82%A650-stamp-duty-on-transfers-above-%E2%82%A610000-from-january-1/ 11 January 2026

    The Punch 2026-01-11

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • Banks begin N50 stamp-duty charge on transfers above N10,000 from Jan 1

    Banks begin N50 stamp-duty charge on transfers above N10,000 from Jan 1

    2025-12-31 08:07:00

    Reporting by Vanguard indicates Nigerian banks are notifying customers that a N50 stamp duty will apply to electronic transfers above N10,000 starting January 1, reflecting changes tied to the new tax framework.

    The key change, as communicated in customer notices, is that the levy is treated as payable by the sender for qualifying transfers—so customers may see the charge as a separate line item.

    For consumers and SMEs, the implication is straightforward: routine transfers that cross the threshold will carry a small additional cost, which can add up for high-frequency digital payments.

    Validation: Nairametrics said “Banks are set to begin charging customers N50 stamp duty on electronic transfers above N10,000 from January 1, 2026.” and TechCabal reported “Customers making electronic transfers above ₦10,000 will begin paying a ₦50 stamp duty from January 1, 2026.”

    Echotitbits take: This will test public tolerance for “small” transactional charges at scale. Watch for clarifications on exemptions, intra-bank transfers, and whether fintech rails apply the same way as traditional bank channels.

    Source: The Cable — 31 December 2025 (https://www.thecable.ng/banks-to-start-charging-senders-n50-stamp-duty-on-transfers-above-n10k-from-january/)

    The Cable 31 December 2025

    Photo Credit: The Cable

  • OPay disowns festive ‘cash giveaway’ rumor and urges users to stop sending money to strangers

    OPay disowns festive ‘cash giveaway’ rumor and urges users to stop sending money to strangers

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-27 06:00:00

    Reporting by Punch indicates fintech platform OPay issued a public warning against a viral claim suggesting it is distributing money to users during the festive season.

    The company cautioned users not to transfer money to strangers and not to share sensitive personal data such as BVN, PINs, or OTP codes, describing the circulating message as a scam vector.

    Fraud analysts say the season’s spike in “giveaway” narratives is a predictable social‑engineering tactic, and rapid public debunking can reduce victims’ losses.

    Echotitbits take:
    This is a reminder that the weakest link is often human behaviour, not the app. Watch for more coordinated anti‑fraud messaging from banks/fintechs, and push for faster takedowns of scam accounts on social platforms.

    Source: The Punch — December 26, 2025 (https://punchng.com/opay-debunks-viral-cash-giveaway-claim-warns-users-of-scammers/)
    The Punch December 26, 2025

  • CBN tightens rules for foreign-card withdrawals as banks told to enable seamless use

    CBN tightens rules for foreign-card withdrawals as banks told to enable seamless use

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-21 06:45:00

    Figures cited by The Nation show the Central Bank of Nigeria has directed banks and non-bank acquirers to configure ATMs, POS and virtual terminals to accept foreign-issued cards while applying stronger authentication above set thresholds.

    The circular instructs institutions to implement multi-factor authentication for foreign card withdrawals and online transactions above $200 per day, $500 per week, and $1,000 per month, and to maintain high system availability for smoother processing.

    Banks are also told to clearly disclose exchange rates and charges before completing transactions, and to strengthen transaction monitoring and KYC/AML controls for merchants handling foreign card payments.

    Premium Times reported the circular requires institutions to ensure terminals are configured to accept international cards and maintain availability to avoid failures, noting users should be shown terms before completion. Vanguard quoted the CBN directive: “implement multi-factor authentication for all withdrawals and online transactions exceeding $200 per day, $500 per week, and $1,000 per month.”

    Echotitbits take:
    For diaspora visitors and tourists, this could reduce declined transactions—if banks implement it cleanly. Watch for short-term disruption (higher declines during recalibration), plus how quickly institutions standardise FX rate disclosures and complaint-resolution timelines.

    Source: The Nation — December 21, 2025 (https://thenationonlineng.net/cbn-asks-banks-to-configure-atms-pos-terminals-for-foreign-card-transactions/)
    The Nation 2025-12-21

  • CBN gives payment firms 30 days to add dual channels for PoS transactions

    CBN gives payment firms 30 days to add dual channels for PoS transactions

    photo: CBN headquarters — Wikipedia

    According to The Punch, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has directed financial institutions, acquirers and payment service providers to implement mandatory dual connectivity for Point-of-Sale (PoS) transactions within one month to reduce failures and downtime.

    The directive, issued via a circular signed by the CBN’s Payments System Supervision leadership, is designed to ensure PoS transactions can automatically route through an alternative channel when one switch or aggregator fails.

    Daily Post also reported the same policy move, describing it as a 30‑day deadline aimed at stabilising PoS performance and reduce persistent transaction disruptions for merchants and consumers.

    Other industry reporting and commentary (including BusinessDay’s coverage shared on social platforms) echoed the policy intent: improve resilience, enforce reporting, and strengthen reliability testing across the payments ecosystem.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: This is a quality-of-service crackdown, not just another circular. If enforcement is real, the biggest impact will be on downtime-driven “lost sales” for SMEs and on customer trust in cashless payments. Watch for compliance audits, penalties for repeated outages, and whether smaller aggregators can afford the redundancy costs without pushing fees higher for users.

    Source: The Punch — 12 Dec 2025 (https://punchng.com/cbn-sets-one-month-deadline-for-dual-pos-connectivity/)