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How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market - Business - Nairaland

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How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by youngsahito(op): 10:55pm On May 07
For years, Nigeria’s telecom operators ran one of the most profitable quiet businesses in the country. They lent airtime and data to millions of prepaid subscribers, charged fees of 10 to 15 percent per transaction, and collected repayments automatically at the next recharge. No paperwork.

No credit bureau checks. No bank account required. The market grew to an estimated N400 billion annually, and almost nobody outside the industry was paying attention.

That era is now ending. New regulations, a regulatory shakeup, and a deliberate push from Nigerian banks have cracked open a market that telcos long treated as their private domain.

The airtime credit model worked because it solved a real problem. Nigeria has over 150 million prepaid mobile subscribers. Most of them earn irregular incomes. Traditional banks rarely offer loans as small as N200 or N500. Telcos filled that gap by letting subscribers borrow airtime or data instantly, using call and recharge history to set limits, and deducting repayments automatically.

MTN Nigeria‘s Xtratime product alone generated N131.62 billion in the first nine months of 2025, which formed the bulk of MTN’s fintech revenue for that period. Core fintech activities outside airtime lending contributed just N6.8 billion during the same window. Airtel Nigeria reported roughly N156 billion in related revenue over a similar period. Across all operators, analysts estimate the sector earned more than N400 billion annually from these services.

Default rates stayed low, often below 5 percent, because the repayment mechanism was foolproof. Miss a repayment and your next recharge simply covered the debt first.

The Regulation That Changed Everything
The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) changed the rules in 2025 with its Digital, Electronic, Online or Non-Traditional Consumer Lending Regulations. The new framework reclassified airtime and data advances as formal lending products rather than telecom add-ons. Operators now needed proper lending licences, consumer protection standards, transparent pricing disclosures, and fair debt recovery practices.

The FCCPC’s concern was legitimate. A 10 to 15 percent flat fee on a seven-day loan translates into an annualised interest rate that far exceeds what most formal lenders charge. Regulators also flagged issues around data privacy, since telcos used subscriber behaviour data for credit decisions without always disclosing this practice clearly.

Operators received a 90-day compliance window starting July 2025. Deadlines extended to January 2026 and then to April 2026. When MTN Nigeria suspended Xtratime in April 2026, the company told investors the move would not materially affect overall financial performance. Critics noted the contradiction: a product generating over N131 billion in nine months could hardly be immaterial.

Airtel Nigeria echoed MTN’s position. Both companies argued that airtime lending, though large in absolute terms, remained a small fraction of their total revenue bases. MTN reported N5.2 trillion in total revenue for 2025.

Five New Lenders Step Into the Gap
After the telco suspension, the FCCPC approved five specialist firms to take over airtime and data lending operations. The approved companies are Total Tim Nigeria Limited, Rane Interactive Medien CLS Limited, Mode NG Applications Limited, Cloud Interactive Associate Limited, and Coverage Broadband Limited.

Under the new structure, telecom operators continue to supply the airtime and data. The five licensed lenders handle customer onboarding, credit assessment, loan approvals, and collections. Revenue flows through partnership agreements rather than directly to the telcos, shifting the model from operator-led to lender-driven.

Banks Move In With Lower Rates and Better Transparency
While regulators reshaped the telco side, Nigerian banks seized the moment. Guaranty Trust Bank launched Quick Airtime Loan, a product that lets customers borrow airtime at 2.95 percent, a fraction of the 10 to 15 percent that telco services typically charged.

Miriam Olusanya, managing director of GTBank, described the product as reflecting the bank’s focus on delivering digital solutions built around real customer needs. The bank combined its *737# USSD platform with HabariPay’s infrastructure to make the service available even to customers using basic phones without internet access.

Repayment happens automatically when the next credit inflow arrives in the customer’s account, typically within seven days. Early repayment carries no penalty.

GTBank is not alone. Several other Nigerian banks have entered or are preparing to enter the space. Banks hold structural advantages that telcos did not: Central Bank oversight, established risk management frameworks, access to detailed account behaviour data, and lower cost of funds. These advantages translate directly into lower rates for borrowers.

What This Means for Ordinary Nigerians
The financial impact for borrowers is significant. A trader who borrows N1,000 worth of airtime under a telco model pays N100 to N150 in fees. The same loan through GTBank’s product costs roughly N30. Over dozens of transactions a year, that difference compounds into real money staying in the hands of small business owners, students, and artisans.

The shift also carries financial inclusion benefits. Linking microcredit to formal banking relationships encourages account activity, builds credit history, and promotes savings habits. Borrowers who previously existed only as prepaid subscribers now develop a trackable financial profile.

However, challenges remain. Most bank airtime loan products require an active account with consistent inflows, often averaging at least N10,000 per month. Informal sector workers, rural residents without qualifying bank relationships, and very low-income earners may still find access difficult. The frictionless convenience that made telco lending so popular, no account needed, instant approval for anyone with a SIM, will be hard to replicate fully within a formal banking framework.

The Broader Regulatory Tension
A jurisdictional dispute has added complexity to the transition. The Association of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) argued that airtime credit services fall under the Nigerian Communications Commission, not the FCCPC. The NCC holds statutory oversight of telecoms under the Nigerian Communications Act. ALTON raised concerns as early as August 2025 that the FCCPC’s rules conflicted with an existing memorandum of understanding between the two agencies.

Federal High Courts in Lagos and Abuja issued interim injunctions restraining interference with licensed Value Added Service providers. Legal proceedings are ongoing.

The dispute highlights a broader tension in Nigeria’s digital economy. As financial services and telecommunications converge, regulatory boundaries blur. Resolving this overlap matters not just for airtime lending but for the entire ecosystem of embedded finance products that telcos and banks will likely compete over in the coming years.

What Comes Next for the N400 Billion Market
The restructuring is not a crisis for telcos so much as a strategic reset. MTN’s active mobile money wallet base stood at just 2.9 million as of late 2025, against 89 million total subscribers. Airtime lending served as the main bridge between MTN’s telecom business and its fintech ambitions. Losing direct control of that bridge forces the company to double down on data growth, payment services, and other digital revenue streams.

For banks, the opportunity is clear. Millions of Nigerians already hold bank accounts but have never accessed credit. Airtime lending is a low-friction entry point that builds credit relationships and cross-sell opportunities. A customer who repays an airtime loan reliably is a strong candidate for consumer loans, salary advances, and savings products.

The five approved specialist lenders face perhaps the hardest task. They must scale quickly, earn consumer trust, and replicate the seamless simplicity of USSD-based telco services while operating within a stricter regulatory framework. New entrants also face competition not just from banks but potentially from each other.

Nigeria’s airtime credit market is not disappearing. It is maturing. What began as a telecom billing feature has evolved into a regulated micro-lending industry with multiple competing players, clearer consumer protections, and lower rates. That evolution benefits borrowers, even as it disrupts the operators who built the market from scratch.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is airtime lending in Nigeria? Airtime lending allows mobile phone subscribers, mostly prepaid users, to borrow small amounts of airtime or data from their network operator and repay the amount, plus a fee, from their next recharge. The service became popular because it required no bank account and offered instant access.

Why did MTN and Airtel suspend airtime lending? Both operators suspended their airtime lending services in April 2026 to comply with new digital lending regulations issued by the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC). The regulations reclassified airtime advances as formal loans requiring proper licences and consumer protection standards.

Which banks now offer airtime loans in Nigeria? Guaranty Trust Bank launched Quick Airtime Loan in 2025, offering airtime credit at 2.95 percent. Other Nigerian banks are actively developing similar products as they move into the space vacated by telcos.

How much does it cost to borrow airtime from a bank compared to a telco? Telcos typically charged 10 to 15 percent per transaction. GTBank’s Quick Airtime Loan charges 2.95 percent, which represents savings of more than 80 percent on the cost of borrowing for eligible customers.

Who are the five companies approved to offer airtime lending in Nigeria? The FCCPC approved Total Tim Nigeria Limited, Rane Interactive Medien CLS Limited, Mode NG Applications Limited, Cloud Interactive Associate Limited, and Coverage Broadband Limited to operate as licensed digital lenders providing airtime and data credit
https://businessday.ng/news/article/banks-swoop-in-on-telcos-n400bn-airtime-lending-business/?amp

Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by budaatum: 11:27pm On May 07
What This Means for Ordinary Nigerians

The financial impact for borrowers is significant. A trader who borrows N1,000 worth of airtime under a telco model pays N100 to N150 in fees. The same loan through GTBank’s product costs roughly N30. Over dozens of transactions a year, that difference compounds into real money staying in the hands of small business owners, students, and artisans.
This is the benefit of being presided over by an accountant.

Vote for Obi!
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Baddest0007: 7:32am On May 08
budaatum:
This is the benefit of being presided over by an accountant.

Vote for Obi!
Vote for Obi even if he is an illiterate Fisherman. Vote for PO our only hope for a new dawn.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by EPIJOE: 7:34am On May 08
The telecos were racking us financially before now. With no regulations.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by BafanaBafana: 7:38am On May 08
With the banks stepping in, the loans will be repaid from your bank accounts.

My major concern is that some people are owing MTN up to 9k and are going to get another sim. Their NIN should be used to deduct the money please. That money cannot go like that.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Baddest0007: 7:40am On May 08
youngsahito:
https://businessday.ng/news/article/banks-swoop-in-on-telcos-n400bn-airtime-lending-business/?amp
I think they should have left MTN and others alone. This is why as a people we are struggling to move on. Banks never loaned people money no matter the money you had and they demanded collateral.

MTN loaned Airtime Credit they never lent money that is what the regulators did not notice. So if I loan my car to someone and they are to pay me back a few how does that concern anyone ? Even if they were making a trillion Naira did the customers complain ?when people defaulted did MTN call them to repay or harrass them to repay ? Did MTN publish their names in the newspapers.

It was a system that benefitted all parties.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Rilwayne001: 7:42am On May 08
Wow, this is such an eye opener.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by pigmania: 7:45am On May 08
This government go just dey eye small kuli kuli wey dey poor man mouth, borrowing airtime is also a life saver in case of emergencies, it shouldn't be all about profits.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by DeltaBachelor(m): 7:47am On May 08
Hmmmm. This is quite interesting
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Eazywit: 7:52am On May 08
budaatum:
This is the benefit of being presided over by an accountant.

Vote for Obi!
U mean 😄bi the trader?
God bless Federal Republic of Nigeria
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by reddingtonblack: 7:55am On May 08
budaatum:
This is the benefit of being presided over by an accountant.

Vote for Obi!
DO you people even think at ALL, where does reality check and impact come in for Tinubu mtheads supporters
Everybody owns a phone number But not everybody owns a bank

The telecom borrow credit has being a success over the year because of its 1st & 2nd party direct engagement forcing a 3rd party into the mix is a Lag

The excuse of interest rate holds no water, Nigerians are not complaining Availability & prompt Access makes it satisfactory

Where we stand now most traditional banks are not realiable & up to speed, infact people are evolving to fintech banks so whoever brought these policy is taking Nigerians backward, loan interest did we complain
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Sensiblerealist(m): 7:55am On May 08
The country cannot grow if people like you project this reasoning. No offense intended
There are system oversight for a reason. The fact that you probably don't borrow or you don't see the interest as much doesn't make it right. They are charging like 15 percent for something that you typically pay back in a few weeks at most. Thats extortion IMO.



Baddest0007:
I think they should have left MTN and others alone. This is why as a people we are struggling to move on. Banks never loaned people money no matter the money you had and they demanded collateral.

MTN loaned Airtime Credit they never lent money that is what the regulators did not notice. So if I loan my car to someone and they are to pay me back a few how does that concern anyone ? Even if they were making a trillion Naira did the customers complain ?when people defaulted did MTN call them to repay or harrass them to repay ? Did MTN publish their names in the newspapers.

It was a system that benefitted all parties.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Guestmale: 7:59am On May 08
pigmania:
This government go just dey eye small kuli kuli wey dey poor man mouth, borrowing airtime is also a life saver in case of emergencies, it shouldn't be all about profits.
This bank airtime loan seems better than telco own,if you're a GTB bank customer. you can borrow up to 10k with interest rate of 2.95%.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Didijiji: 8:02am On May 08
who owns the 5 new companies empowered in this new regulation?
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by koxyz: 8:03am On May 08
My major concern is how those given license will be able to replicate that instant access without glitches.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by persius555(m): 8:20am On May 08
Traditional Banking institution stepping into uncharted, unfamiliar territory of operation is an indication that they're not doing well at all.

So, it was them all along. Conniving with the government agency to hijack a thriving business operation. The banks know next to nothing about how these telecommunication services work. They should stick to their core.

The last time MTN indictated interest to go into full mobile money banking services, it was these same banks that petitioned the CBN to oppose this move. NCC should wake up and do the needful. The banks are overstepping their boundaries.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Oluwaseunomo: 8:28am On May 08
BafanaBafana:
With the banks stepping in, the loans will be repaid from your bank accounts.

My major concern is that some people are owing MTN up to 9k and are going to get another sim. Their NIN should be used to deduct the money please. That money cannot go like that.
E concern you mind your business oga
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Oluwaseunomo: 8:29am On May 08
Didijiji:
who owns the 5 new companies empowered in this new regulation?
Your guess is as good as mine
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by budaatum: 8:34am On May 08
reddingtonblack:
Everybody owns a phone number But not everybody owns a bank.
Now. Imagine you are president. You need to borrow money. Your people can talk anyhow they want but they don't have bank.

Can you see how you might force everybody to bank so you can tax them, especially if MTN and Co is taxing 15% already?
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by AcadaWriter0: 8:54am On May 08
Nigerian banks are squeezing Telcos’s market share with this new regulation. It’s a good sign for them, right?
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by erniok(m): 9:03am On May 08
Baddest0007:
I think they should have left MTN and others alone. This is why as a people we are struggling to move on. Banks never loaned people money no matter the money you had and they demanded collateral.

MTN loaned Airtime Credit they never lent money that is what the regulators did not notice. So if I loan my car to someone and they are to pay me back a few how does that concern anyone ? Even if they were making a trillion Naira did the customers complain ?when people defaulted did MTN call them to repay or harrass them to repay ? Did MTN publish their names in the newspapers.

It was a system that benefitted all parties.
Do you have regulators watching your every move like MTN? You complained about banks today, with zero oversight, you'll certainly complain about mtn tomorrow.

I disagree with FCCPC taking the lending from the telecos. Rather, it should be well structured so that there won't be issues with recovery,
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by erniok(m): 9:05am On May 08
BafanaBafana:
With the banks stepping in, the loans will be repaid from your bank accounts.

My major concern is that some people are owing MTN up to 9k and are going to get another sim. Their NIN should be used to deduct the money please. That money cannot go like that.
If your borrowing is up to 9k, it means you can repay. The telecoms use your recharge model to give you an advanced airtime. Moreover, why should you discard your line that has been with you for years because of mere 9k
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by reddingtonblack: 9:18am On May 08
budaatum:
Now. Imagine you are president. You need to borrow money. Your people can talk anyhow they want but they don't have bank.
Trust ! i tried so hard to make sense of your question, what as talking got to do with owning account
talking is essential and a fundamental part of human lives, Banking is just an optional service people can do without
I own a bank account what success does it contribute to me asides what i earn into it. Life is choice, Bank is optional cos it of no use IF you are not useful to it



Can you see how you might force everybody to bank so you can tax them, especially if MTN and Co is taxing 15% already?


Really, i dont see how these change of policy compels everyone to bank, loan na choice, if i must go through rigorous process to get credit loan then i might as well forget about it
Let me share a reality, Since they cancel the telecoms credit access, People have withdrawn to manage what they have

Me for instance i use to borrow from my network directly buh since it stop ... I recharge more and just forget "Loan"

Thats how We Nigerians are smiley do your findings
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Dpaulie(m): 9:28am On May 08
budaatum:
This is the benefit of being presided over by an accountant.

Vote for Obi!
Obi na accountanthuh?

I think he's a third class philosopher
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by budaatum: 10:05am On May 08
Dpaulie:
Obi na accountanthuh?

I think he's a third class philosopher
Tinubu na accountant now. He done this good.

Vote for Obi!
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by budaatum: 10:08am On May 08
reddingtonblack:
[/b]

Really, i dont see how these change of policy compels everyone to bank, loan na choice, if i must go through rigorous process to get credit loan then i might as well forget about it
Let me share a reality, Since they cancel the telecoms credit access, People have withdrawn to manage what they have

Me for instance i use to borrow from my network directly buh since it stop ... I recharge more and just forget "Loan"

Thats how We Nigerians are smiley do your findings
Not everybody is disciplined like you who has "withdrawn to manage what they have". Most who loan airtime can not manage what they can afford, and at 2.5%, the banks are enticing knowing it will be post 10% in a couple years time.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by grandstar(m): 10:26am On May 08
If it isnt broken, why fix it? The old system worked very well.

This is just overregulation.
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by reddingtonblack: 11:08am On May 08
budaatum:
Not everybody is disciplined like you who has "withdrawn to manage what they have". Most who loan airtime can not manage what they can afford, and at 2.5%, the banks are enticing knowing it will be post 10% in a couple years time.
I am not saying everybody is like, Buh ONE i know is " How Nigerian think and react " ...its in our blood we adjust to manage most times, thats why they say we are resilience

i am telling Most average Nigerians are not weary of the diversion to borrow from Bank, i was listening to a radio show yesterday by some Genz wailing about the service block, they didnt even know alternative is now with the banks

just ask around, you will see people are not informed
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by Bluntemperor:
Baddest0007:
Vote for Obi even if he is an illiterate Fisherman. Vote for PO our only hope for a new dawn.
You turned 🛞 a genuine business Mindsets to a biased- Political -affiliations ,which is Wrong but why mentioning Obi here ⁉️
The same Obi is now Chairman of a Fidelity Bank and how did he got the Money 💰🤑,to become Such ?
Or
You have a Choice -to Advertise any of your Candidates - but Not on a Serious Matters of- Telecommunications And The Banks,as in the Above case.
Are you People Jazed ?
• On the Discussions of the Telecommunications and Banks,the MTN is Worst of them ALL !
- I bought my line from Onset - when MTN came to Nigeria and not until recently I decided to change to Another Line Because they have been Fraudulent with my Data Money 🤑.
Recently,I have decided to move permanently,when I loaded 2 k - about 2- weeks ago and the money disappeared - without using my data.
This are Tricks the Telecommunications are Deadly Dealing with NIGERIANS.
• We Need A New Set of INVESTORS into The Telecommunications,
- that can Lower Rates Prices and,
- Be of Trust and
- Have Integrity in Dealings With NIGERIANS!
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by frog12: 12:52pm On May 08
It's long overdue. Already abused. I mean to borrow to talkhuh

reddingtonblack:
I am not saying everybody is like, Buh ONE i know is " How Nigerian think and react " ...its in our blood we adjust to manage most times, thats why they say we are resilience

i am telling Most average Nigerians are not weary of the diversion to borrow from Bank, i was listening to a radio show yesterday by some Genz wailing about the service block, they didnt even know alternative is now with the banks

just ask around, you will see people are not informed
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by reddingtonblack: 1:48pm On May 08
frog12:
It's long overdue. Already abused. I mean to borrow to talkhuh
I am lost, what do you mean long overdue ... Are you even knowledge

The whole concept of credit airtime & data pop from emergence situation you are out of reach to buy card or unable to use your bank app But You must make a call or send data online in that moment ..it cant wait thats what prompt
No matter your emergency ..as long as you have network you can access data or call promptly

HOW can a Sane person now opined " credit loan is abused" .. How ??

Is this about politics, if you feel Nigerians are able to curse Tinubu & his thief politicians cos of credit data then you must he shallow minded

If credit airtime/data is abuse, it the sole position of the telecoms problem, how does it concern govt.

No measure or antics from Tinubu govt will ever stop Nigerians from expressing themselvees, what nunsense
Re: How Nigerian Banks Are Capturing Telcos’ ₦400 Billion Airtime Lending Market by AfDapone: 7:30pm On May 08
Sensiblerealist:
The country cannot grow if people like you project this reasoning. No offense intended
There are system oversight for a reason. The fact that you probably don't borrow or you don't see the interest as much doesn't make it right. They are charging like 15 percent for something that you typically pay back in a few weeks at most. Thats extortion IMO.
You are the gullible one here. The regulator could have the telcos regulated their charges on said basis but instead they decide to break a working system with the promise that interest on airtime credit will be low so as to garner initial public support. whereas you should by now understand the banking system that deduct charge even for receiving fund into account.

They eyed the gains on Telcos lending and they use their power to distructure a fine-grained solution to micro economic challenges.

They should have required the telcos to restructure the way they charge to conform with new requirement and sanction non-compliance just like the uniformity that was carried out on USSD.
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