Nigeria’s digital infrastructure sector is poised for a significant transformation following the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) directive requiring banks, fintech firms, payment service providers, and other regulated financial institutions to store customer and transaction data within the country by January 1, 2027.
The policy, which mandates that all payment transaction data generated in Nigeria be hosted and managed on domestic servers, marks one of the most consequential regulatory interventions in the country’s digital economy in recent years. The CBN says the measure is designed to strengthen regulatory oversight, enhance data sovereignty, improve cybersecurity resilience, and safeguard national security interests.
Industry stakeholders believe the directive will trigger a wave of investments across Nigeria’s technology infrastructure landscape as firms move to align with the new requirements. The country’s financial services ecosystem, including commercial banks, fintech companies, mobile money operators, switching platforms, and payment processors, has historically relied heavily on foreign cloud infrastructure providers. Analysts estimate that more than 90 percent of regulated entities currently host substantial portions of their operational data outside Nigeria.
That dependence is expected to change rapidly as compliance deadlines approach. Demand for domestic data centres, cloud computing platforms, interconnection services, fibre networks, and cybersecurity solutions is likely to rise sharply, creating new opportunities for infrastructure investors and technology providers.
The directive could also generate broader economic benefits. By reducing reliance on overseas cloud services, Nigerian financial institutions may significantly cut foreign exchange expenditure associated with paying for offshore hosting and data management services. Increased utilisation of local infrastructure could help retain more technology spending within the domestic economy while supporting job creation across the information and communications technology sector.
However, the transition is not without challenges. Financial institutions face potentially substantial migration costs, particularly those operating complex legacy systems integrated with international cloud environments. Moving sensitive customer information and mission-critical payment systems to local infrastructure will require extensive testing, security validation, and operational adjustments to avoid service disruptions.
Industry experts also note that Nigeria’s data centre ecosystem must scale rapidly to accommodate the anticipated surge in demand. Investments in power reliability, connectivity, redundancy, and technical capacity will be critical to ensuring that local infrastructure can meet global performance and security standards.
Despite these hurdles, market observers view the policy as a strategic step toward strengthening Nigeria’s digital independence and positioning the country as a leading data hosting and cloud services hub in Africa. As the 2027 deadline draws closer, the directive is expected to reshape investment priorities across the financial and technology sectors, reinforcing the central role of digital infrastructure in Nigeria’s economic future.




