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FCCPC Clarifies No Ban on Airtime Borrowing or Data Advance Services

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Summary

The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC Nigeria) has issued a clarification stating that it has not banned airtime borrowing or data advance services in Nigeria, contrary to misinformation circulating in newspapers and social media. The commission issued the DEON Consumer Lending Regulations in July 2025 to address consumer complaints about opaque charges, unexplained deductions, aggressive recovery practices, and poor disclosure in digital lending. After two compliance windows (initial 90-day period plus extension to January 5, 2026), affected operators failed to register and regularize their services. The FCCPC states any service changes are business decisions by operators, not regulatory bans.

“The Commission has not prohibited airtime borrowing or data advance services, and no directive was issued preventing consumers from accessing lawful telecom value-added services.”

Published by FCCPC Nigeria on fccpc.gov.ng . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

GovPing monitors FCCPC Nigeria News for new consumer protection regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.

What changed

The FCCPC issued a clarification on April 17, 2026, denying that it banned or prohibited airtime borrowing and data advance services. The statement responds to newspaper reports and viral social media posts falsely claiming the commission cancelled or shut down these services. The clarification references the DEON Consumer Lending Regulations issued in July 2025, which established compliance requirements for digital lending operators, including proper registration, responsible lending conduct, clear fee disclosure, and data protection safeguards.

Telecom operators offering airtime or data advance services should note that any suspension or operational changes in these services are characterized by the FCCPC as voluntary business decisions rather than regulatory bans. Operators who have not yet complied with DEON registration requirements face continued regulatory scrutiny under the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act, 2018. The FCCPC's statement emphasizes that commercial arrangements do not displace competition and consumer protection obligations, and advises the public to disregard false narratives about the regulations.

Archived snapshot

Apr 23, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Home » MISINFORMATION BY DESPERATE CARTEL AGAINST FCCPC DEON REGULATIONS

  • MISINFORMATION BY DESPERATE CARTEL AGAINST FCCPC DEON REGULATIONS

MISINFORMATION BY DESPERATE CARTEL AGAINST FCCPC DEON REGULATIONS

Friday, April 17, 2026: The attention of the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission has been drawn to a series of newspaper publication and a viral anonymous post in the social media seeking to create the impression that the Commission cancelled, shut down, or banned airtime borrowing and data advance services in Nigeria.

Those claims are incorrect. The Commission has not prohibited airtime borrowing or data advance services, and no directive was issued preventing consumers from accessing lawful telecom value-added services.

Following a deluge of consumer complaints bordering on opaque charges, unexplained deductions, aggressive recovery practices, poor disclosure standards, and inadequate accountability in segments of the digital lending and advance-services market, the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission issued the DEON Consumer Lending Regulations in July 2025.

The Regulations were introduced, among other reasons, to curb the excesses of abusive service providers whose practices had generated persistent consumer harm and undermined confidence in the market.

The primary aim is to promote a fairer and more transparent system by mandating proper registration, responsible lending conduct, clear disclosure of fees and terms, accessible consumer complaint channels, data protection safeguards, stronger accountability for third-party partners, and effective regulatory oversight.

In the telecom sector, our findings indicated that some operators engaged in exclusionary third-party technical arrangements in clear disobedience to the provisions of the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act, 2018. The Regulations sought to unlock the market to allow local participants alongside foreign partners, in line with free market principles.

These measures benefit Nigerians by reducing abusive practices, improving transparency, strengthening consumer choice, and encouraging responsible innovation by legitimate operators.

We are aware that some vested interests and their foreign collaborators are opposed to the creation of safe markets and fair competition, therefore resorting to a campaign of disinformation.

Operators are expected to structure their commercial relationships in a manner consistent with Nigerian law. Commercial arrangements or outsourcing decisions do not displace competition and consumer protection obligations.

At the commencement of the framework in July 2025, affected operators were granted an initial 90-day compliance period to regularise their products, structures, and operations.

That opportunity was not utilised within the prescribed timeframe, specifically in the telecom sector. The compliance window was subsequently extended until 5 January 2026, providing additional time for alignment with applicable requirements. Despite that further extension, the necessary compliance steps were still not completed by the relevant operators.

Notwithstanding clear regulatory requirements, some operators chose to maintain the status quo by failing to register and regularise their services. In doing so, they continued operating monopolistic models that had long generated consumer complaints, including concerns relating to transparency, deductions, charges, and accountability.

Any temporary suspension, restriction, or operational change introduced by service providers should therefore be understood as a business or compliance decision by those operators, not a ban imposed by the FCCPC.

It is inaccurate to attribute avoidable disruption to regulation where regulated entities had adequate notice and sufficient opportunity to comply.

Attempts to misrepresent temporary service inconvenience as the result of lawful consumer regulation are mischievous. Nigerians deserve accurate information, not sensational claims.

Consumers and members of the public are advised to disregard false and misleading narratives on this issue.

The FCCPC is fully committed to protecting consumers, promoting fair competition, encouraging responsible innovation, ensuring transparent digital financial practices, and working constructively with sector regulators and service providers in the public interest.

Ondaje Ijagwu

Director, Corporate Affairs

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
FCCPC Nigeria
Published
April 17th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Technology companies Consumers
Industry sector
5170 Telecommunications
Activity scope
Regulatory clarification Consumer protection enforcement Digital lending oversight
Geographic scope
NG NG

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Consumer Finance Telecommunications

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