The Nigerian Insurance Industry is anticipating a significant uplift in its contribution to the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), following the enactment of the Nigerian Insurance Industry Reform Act (NIIRA) 2025.
Experts believe the new legislation, signed by President Bola Tinubu in July 2025, is key to the sector driving Nigeria’s ambitious vision of building a $1 trillion economy by enhancing market stability and expanding insurance coverage.
The sweeping reforms focus primarily on two crucial areas: financial resilience and consumer confidence.
To ensure insurance companies have the financial muscle to cover claims, the NIIRA introduces substantially higher capital thresholds.
The minimum capital requirement has been raised to ₦10 billion for Life insurance, ₦15 billion for Non-Life insurance, and ₦35 billion for Reinsurance firms.
This capital boost will give insurance firms the capacity to underwrite larger risks and retain more business locally (domestication). This retention, in turn, is expected to stimulate economic growth and employment within the country.
The Act also requires a Risk-Based Capital approach, meaning a firm’s capital must match the risks it assumes. This step is vital for demonstrating financial capability and ensuring the timely settlement of claims.
The second central aim is to rebuild public confidence, which has historically been low. The NIIRA mandates the simplification of operations.
Crucially, policy documents must now be issued before a policy commences and must be written in simple, clear terms that are easy for the average punter to understand.
Industry bodies, such as the Nigeria Insurers Association (NIA), have pledged to focus on the swift implementation of the new law.
Their strategy involves raising public awareness about mandatory policies—such as insurance required for petrol stations and certain commercial vehicles—and ensuring operators adhere strictly to prompt claims payment to sustain the uptick in trust.
Ultimately, experts argue that by capitalising on the vast, uninsured informal sector—which contributes around 60% of Nigeria’s GDP—the reformed insurance industry can become a much stronger engine for national economic expansion.



