- Rollout aims to boost credit access and fintech innovation across Nigeria’s economy
- Investors eye regulatory clarity as a catalyst for renewed capital inflows
Lagos, Nigeria – In a move to modernise its financial ecosystem, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is set to formally launch its open banking framework on August 1, 2025—making Nigeria the first African country to fully implement the policy. The rollout is expected to reshape the financial services landscape and unlock billions of dollars in economic opportunities across credit, payments, and data-driven financial products.
Open banking allows financial institutions to securely share customer-permitted data with third-party providers via standardised APIs. This shift enables banks, fintechs, and developers to build interoperable services, giving consumers greater control over their financial information and access to a wider range of digital products. For investors, the framework positions Nigeria as a fintech frontier market poised for accelerated growth.
Despite steady gains in digital adoption, Nigeria’s financial system continues to face persistent barriers, including limited credit penetration and fragmented data infrastructure. According to the World Bank’s Global Findex, while more than 45% of Nigerian adults hold bank accounts, only about 4% have access to formal credit. Open banking could prove transformative in breaking these structural bottlenecks.
Maturing financial sector
Ibrahim Oredola, founder of Sanwo, a fintech that enables risk-free online transactions through escrow and mediation services, said the launch was long overdue and could usher in sweeping reforms.
“For the banks, having an open banking system means that their monopoly on customers’ financial data is being reduced,” he said.
“Banks will now be forced to even be more innovative and to work with other stakeholders in the sector in making the financial system more efficient and transformative,” Oredola added. “If this open banking becomes a reality, so it means that there is the possibility that it’ll even reduce transaction charges, you know, because it’s open, right? It’s open in the sense that you might not have to pay an arm and the leg for transactions to happen and all that.”
The policy shift is also expected to bolster investment in Nigeria’s already fast-growing fintech ecosystem. API infrastructure firms such as Mono, OnePipe, Okra, and Stitch—many of which began building ahead of regulation—are well-positioned to scale. International venture capital firms including Y Combinator, Tiger Global, and Target Global have already poured more than $560 million into Nigerian fintech startups in 2022 alone. The introduction of a formal open banking regime is expected to reignite investor confidence by offering regulatory clarity and reducing risk.
For regional and global investors, Nigeria’s open banking launch signals a maturing financial sector with the ambition to scale digital financial inclusion. With a population of over 220 million, mobile penetration exceeding 80%, and a tech-savvy youth demographic, Nigeria represents one of the most promising fintech markets on the continent.