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By Juliet Umeh
“I recently realized how much I am losing to bank charges after reviewing my transactions linked to a contribution scheme I manage,” Mrs. Elizabeth Akpan told Saturday Vanguard.
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“It has been horrible. You don’t even know what you are being charged for,” she said, her tone heavy with frustration.
What began as a routine review, she explained, soon turned unsettling as she started noticing repeated deductions across her accounts.
“I opened my one bank’s app and saw different kinds of charges – SMS charges and all sorts of deductions. I checked another account with another bank and it was almost the same thing. They charge for this and charge for that,” she said.
For her, what is most worrying is not just the size of the deductions but how frequently they occur.
“If I show you my account statement, you will see N50, N100, N250 and N300 popping up. Before you know it, the money is gone. Most people don’t even know exactly what they are paying for,” she said.
Frustration
Beyond personal frustration, Akpan said the experience has made her question the transparency of the system, warning that it is gradually eroding confidence in formal banking.
“They are talking about financial inclusion, but these charges are frustrating people. Sometimes it feels like keeping money under your pillow is better, except for the risk of theft,” she added softly.
Across Nigeria, citizens are increasingly being encouraged to adopt digital payments as the government, banks and fintech companies expand investments in the country’s Digital Public Infrastructure, DPI, the foundational systems that support digital identity, payments and data exchange.
Yet for many users, trust in that infrastructure is being tested by charges they often struggle to understand.
While Nigeria has invested heavily in digital payment infrastructure through initiatives led by the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, the Nigerian Inter-Bank Settlement System, NIBSS, banks and fintech operators, many users say their lived experience is defined more by deductions they struggle to understand than by convenience.
Digital payments surge, but confusion grows
The debate over bank charges is unfolding at a time Nigeria is recording unprecedented growth in electronic payments.
Data from NIBSS shows that the value of instant payment transactions surged to N1.07 quadrillion in 2024, representing a 78 percent increase from N600.36 trillion recorded in 2023. The highest monthly value was recorded in December 2024 at N115 trillion, reflecting the growing dependence of Nigerians on digital transactions.
Similarly, Nigerians carried out 1.38 billion Point-of-Sale, POS, transactions worth N18.32 trillion in 2024, while mobile money operators processed transactions valued at N79.5 trillion, according to NIBSS data.
Figures published by the CBN also show that internet-based transfers accounted for 51.91 percent of all electronic payment transactions by volume as of June 2024, while POS transactions represented 28.53 percent and mobile payments 15.58 percent.
This growth aligns with Nigeria’s financial inclusion agenda. The 2023 Access to Finance Survey by EFInA found that financial inclusion in Nigeria rose to 74 percent in 2023, up from 68 percent in 2020, reducing the financially excluded population to 26 percent.
Yet, experts warn that growth in transaction volumes does not automatically translate into trust.
The problem is opacity, not overcharging – Tech experts
Speaking at Open Access Data Centre, a technology expert, Obinna Adumike, said Nigerians are not necessarily being overcharged in strict terms, but are instead facing a deeper problem of poor understanding and transparency.
“I wouldn’t necessarily say Nigerians are being overcharged in a strict sense because most customers do not even clearly understand the full list of deductions being made from their accounts,” he said.
According to him, many Nigerians only become aware of charges when they review statements or transaction histories, where multiple deductions appear without context.
“In many cases, you only become aware of these charges when you print your statement and suddenly see deductions for transfers, maintenance, VAT and other items that often appear confusing to the average user,” he explained.
“Technically, these charges are published and available, but the problem is not availability; it is accessibility and comprehension. There is a wide gap in financial literacy and digital understanding,” he said.
Adumike argued that the system itself needs simplification.
“From a technology standpoint, the system needs to be far more streamlined. We should have a consolidated structure, one clear line for bank charges, another for government taxes. Everything else should be simplified into a predictable framework.”
He said technology should play a stronger role in improving transparency at the point of transaction.
“Banking apps should not just execute transactions; they should disclose costs upfront. Before confirmation, users should see a breakdown of amount, VAT, transfer fees and total cost. Most modern payment systems already do this,” he noted.
He cited fintech platforms as examples of better transparency.
“For example, platforms like Jumia checkout systems or payment processors like Paystack show full cost breakdowns before payment is completed. Traditional banking apps still need to improve in this area.”
Adumike also called for stronger public education.
“CBN has made efforts to publish guidelines, but putting information on a website is not enough. There needs to be stronger digital education, possibly in partnership with agencies like the National Orientation Agency,” he said.
On whether Nigerians are overcharged, he said perception is shaped more by opacity than excess, adding “the issue is not necessarily excessive charging; it is lack of clarity. That is what creates distrust.”
He warned that confusion around charges could affect financial inclusion because “when people feel unsure about deductions, some begin to lose confidence in the system. In extreme cases, they may prefer informal cash storage. But that decision is influenced by multiple factors, not charges alone.”
Ultimately, he said trust remains the central issue.
POS operators feel the pressure
The concerns extend beyond bank customers to POS operators, who sit at the frontline of Nigeria’s cashless push.
Mrs. Anna Bush, a small business owner, said recent transaction charges have triggered fresh complaints from customers.
“A lot of people complain about deductions from their accounts and debit alerts for one thing or another,” she said.
“Now there is another charge on POS transactions. We were told it is from the Central Bank of Nigeria and that transactions from N10,000 and above will attract charges. It was not like this before.”
According to her, customers increasingly feel they are paying charges at multiple points in a single transaction.
“If I transfer money from my bank account to a POS account above N10,000, a charge will be deducted. Customers complain that they are paying for POS transfers, and banks are also charging them. It feels like people are being

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