For millions of Nigerians, the convenience of digital banking is about to come with a steeper price tag. From January 2026, the era of the “sender pays” model will officially begin, fundamentally altering the cost structure of electronic money transfers. A routine transfer of ₦50,000, which currently incurs a standard bank charge, will see its cost effectively double to ₦100 for the sender, as the federal government shifts the burden of the Electronic Money Transfer Levy (EMTL) away from receivers.
This policy change, buried within the new fiscal frameworks of the Nigeria Tax Act 2025, rebrands the existing EMTL as a “Stamp Duty.” While the amount remains ₦50 on transactions of ₦10,000 and above, the pivot in liability is significant. Previously, the recipient of the funds bore this deduction—a passive, often unnoticed charge. By shifting the obligation to the sender, the levy becomes an active, repeated expense for anyone moving money, from individuals settling bills to businesses paying vendors.
The reaction to this policy shift has been swift and polarized, reflecting a nation already grappling with high inflation.
On the official front, the government frames this as a necessary fiscal decentralization. Taiwo Oyedele, chairman of the Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee, argues that the move is designed to empower state governments. “From 2026, states will no longer share the Electronic Money Transfer Levy with the federal and local governments; it will belong entirely to them,” Oyedele stated, suggesting this revenue windfall could help subnational governments build sustainable fiscal capacity.
However, for the thriving fintech sector, which built its user base on the promise of low-cost or free transfers, the policy represents an existential friction. As a recent TechCabal analysis noted, “Each new layer of fees chips away at that advantage,” warning that the visibility of the fee could reshape consumer behavior and erode the “fast, simple, and affordable” allure of digital payments.
The burden is expected to fall heaviest on small businesses. Ikeokwu Precious, a financial analyst, observed that while the change might spare low-income receivers, “SMEs who make multiple transfers daily will feel the weight.” For a business owner making ten transfers a day, this seemingly negligible ₦50 adds up to a substantial annual operating cost, one likely to be passed down to consumers.
Broader economic observers are equally wary. Seun Onigbinde, co-founder of BudgIT, placed the levy in the context of Nigeria’s fragile economic state. He noted that the “nation stands at a crossroads, with inflation rising faster than household earnings,” implying that any additional cost, no matter how small, exacerbates the widening gap between income and survival.
On the streets, the sentiment is less technical and more visceral. In a report capturing the public mood, a civil servant in Ibadan described the relentless introduction of new levies with biting sarcasm: “They want to insure poverty itself.” This feeling was echoed in a wider survey by local media, which described a “weary chorus of frustration” from citizens “struggling to survive under a relentless barrage of levies.”
As 2026 approaches, Nigerians must prepare for a banking landscape where the cost of generosity and commerce rises, ₦50 at a time.




