Whether you’re launching a microfinance bank, a payment service provider, or a finance company, securing a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) operating licence is the foundation of your regulatory journey. Here’s what institutions need to know in 2025 and beyond.
In this article
- Why CBN licensing matters for your institution
- Types of CBN licences and which applies to you
- Step-by-step licence application process
- Key documents and minimum capital requirements
- Common pitfalls — and how to avoid them
- How M33 can support your licensing journey
- Frequently asked questions
Why CBN licensing matters for your institution
Operating a financial institution in Nigeria without the appropriate Central Bank of Nigeria licence is not just a regulatory infraction — it exposes promoters, directors, and investors to significant legal and reputational risk. Under the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA) 2020, unlicensed financial activity can attract stiff penalties including fines and criminal prosecution.
Beyond compliance, a valid CBN licence is a trust signal. It tells customers, counterparties, and investors that your institution has met rigorous fitness-and-propriety standards. For fintech companies seeking payment system licences, it is increasingly a prerequisite for partnerships with Tier-1 banks and telecommunications firms.
Expert insight
Nigeria’s financial services regulatory landscape has evolved significantly since BOFIA 2020. Institutions that proactively align their governance structures with updated CBN requirements are better positioned for provisional licence approval within the 6–12 month window.
Types of CBN licences and which applies to you
The CBN issues different categories of licences depending on the nature and scale of financial services your institution intends to offer. Below is a quick reference overview:
| Institution type | Relevant licence | Minimum capital (₦) |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial bank (national) | Commercial Banking Licence | 500 billion |
| Merchant bank | Merchant Banking Licence | 15 billion |
| Microfinance bank (unit) | MFB Licence — Unit | 200 million |
| Microfinance bank (state) | MFB Licence — State | 1 billion |
| Finance company | Finance Company Licence | 100 million |
| Payment service bank | PSB Licence | 5 billion |
| Super agent | Super Agent Licence | 50 million |
Capital thresholds reflect post-recapitalisation requirements effective from 2024 onwards. Promoters should verify the most current figures against CBN circulars before committing funds, as these are subject to periodic revision.
Step-by-step licence application process
The CBN licence application process is broadly structured around two phases: approval-in-principle (AIP) and the final operating licence. Here is how the journey typically unfolds:
- Pre-application engagementConduct a feasibility study and a market viability assessment. This is not mandatory, but institutions that present one are viewed more favourably at the AIP stage.
- Incorporation with CACRegister a company with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) under the specific name approved for financial business. The CBN requires a dedicated-purpose vehicle — no mixed-activity companies.
- Submit AIP applicationFile the AIP package including the shareholders’ fund evidence, promoters’ profiles, draft business plan, and governance framework. All documents must be in the CBN’s prescribed format.
- Regulatory review and due diligenceThe CBN conducts fit-and-proper checks on promoters and proposed directors, reviews the business model, and may request clarifications over a 3–6 month window.
- Approval-in-principle grantedUpon AIP, the institution has up to 12 months to fulfil all outstanding conditions including office setup, IT infrastructure, and minimum capital deposit.
- Final licence applicationSubmit evidence of AIP condition fulfilment. The CBN conducts an inspection of premises and systems before issuing the final operating licence.
Key documents and minimum capital requirements
Core application documents
While requirements vary slightly by institution type, the following are standard across most CBN licence categories:
- Certified true copy of the CAC certificate of incorporation
- Memorandum and Articles of Association (MEMART)
- Board-approved feasibility study and five-year business plan
- Curriculum vitae and personal declarations of all proposed directors and key management staff
- Evidence of shareholders’ fund (bank statement or escrow confirmation)
- Draft AML/CFT policy, compliance manual, and risk management framework
- IT infrastructure plan and data management policy
- Organisational chart and succession planning document
Common mistake
Submitting incomplete AML/CFT frameworks is among the leading causes of AIP delays. The CBN expects applicants to demonstrate not just awareness of anti-money laundering obligations, but an operational readiness to implement them from day one.
Common pitfalls — and how to avoid them
Having worked closely with CBN licensing procedures over the past decade, M33 has observed patterns that consistently slow or derail applications. The most frequent issues include:
Inadequate corporate governance documentation. The CBN scrutinises board composition, director independence, and the separation between ownership and management. Institutions that present governance frameworks tailored to CBN codes — rather than generic corporate templates — significantly improve their chances of a smooth AIP review.
Underestimating the compliance burden. Regulatory compliance does not end at licence issuance. CBN-licensed institutions must file periodic returns, maintain prescribed capital adequacy ratios, and submit to routine examinations. Building a compliance infrastructure before your first day of operations is not optional — it is a condition of the licence.
Choosing the wrong licence category. Some fintech promoters apply for a full MFB licence when a Super Agent or payment service bank licence would better suit their business model and capital position. Misalignment between the licence type and business activity can result in outright rejection.
Best practice
Engage a regulatory consultant before filing. A pre-submission review of your application package typically reduces back-and-forth with the CBN and can cut months off your overall timeline.
How M33 can support your licensing journey
M33 Nigeria Limited provides end-to-end support for financial institutions seeking CBN and SEC licences. Our consulting engagements cover feasibility studies, application preparation, AML/CFT framework development, and direct regulatory liaison. We also offer post-licensing compliance advisory and board-level governance support.
With over 10 years of combined experience working directly with the CBN, SEC, NAICOM, and the Bank of Industry, our team brings practical, regulator-informed insight that generic legal advisory firms cannot replicate. Our Director, Hans Omang, currently serves as a Non-Executive Director on the boards of a CBN-licensed Finance Company and a SEC-licensed Asset Management firm — giving M33 a live, board-level view of the regulatory environment our clients navigate.