7.5% VAT on Mobile, USSD Transfer: What It Means for Digital Banking
From January 19, 2026, Nigerian bank customers will begin paying a 7.5% Value Added Tax (VAT) on mobile banking transfers, USSD transactions, and related electronic banking services. This development, alongside the existing N50 stamp duty on electronic transfers of N10,000 and above, marks a significant shift in the cost structure of everyday banking in Nigeria and signals a new phase in the country’s digital finance transition.
Under the new regime, VAT will apply to service fees charged by banks for mobile app transfers, USSD banking, and other electronic transaction channels. While the principal amount transferred will not be taxed, the VAT will be calculated on the transaction fees imposed by banks for providing these digital services.
In addition, the statutory N50 stamp duty will continue to apply to electronic transfers of N10,000 and above, as mandated by existing fiscal policy. The combined effect is that customers will now face layered charges: bank transaction fees, 7.5% VAT on those fees, and stamp duty where applicable.
Why Banks Are Taking This Step
Banks’ implementation of VAT on digital transactions reflects stricter compliance with federal tax regulations and increased alignment with the government’s revenue mobilisation drive. As digital banking has become the dominant channel for payments and transfers, regulators are tightening enforcement to ensure that taxable services within the financial sector are fully captured.
For banks, this move also provides regulatory clarity. Rather than absorbing VAT costs or operating in grey areas, financial institutions are normalising their pricing structures and passing statutory taxes directly to customers, in line with tax law.
For retail customers, especially low-and-middle-income earners who rely heavily on USSD and mobile transfers, the immediate impact will be higher transaction costs. Although VAT applies only to service charges, frequent small-value transfers could cumulatively become more expensive, subtly discouraging high transaction volumes.
Small businesses and informal traders, many of whom depend on USSD banking due to limited smartphone or internet access, may feel a disproportionate burden. The additional costs could prompt some users to consolidate transfers, reduce transaction frequency, or explore alternative payment channels.
Nigeria’s digital banking revolution has been driven by affordability and convenience. The introduction of VAT on mobile and USSD transactions risks slowing momentum, particularly among financially vulnerable segments. If digital banking becomes noticeably more expensive than cash-based alternatives, there is a risk of partial reversion to cash usage, undermining financial inclusion gains.
However, the policy could also accelerate innovation. Banks and fintechs may respond by redesigning pricing models, offering bundled transactions, or promoting lower-cost digital channels to retain customers and sustain adoption.
Broader Economic and Fiscal Significance
From a macroeconomic perspective, the move broadens the tax base and strengthens non-oil revenue, a key priority for fiscal sustainability. As electronic payments dominate Nigeria’s financial ecosystem, taxing digital banking services reflects a modernisation of the tax framework in line with economic realities.
The commencement of 7.5% VAT on mobile and USSD banking transactions, combined with the N50 stamp duty on qualifying transfers, represents a critical inflection point for Nigeria’s banking landscape. While it enhances fiscal compliance and government revenue, its success will depend on how sensitively banks implement the charges and how effectively regulators balance revenue goals with financial inclusion objectives.
For customers, the new era demands greater awareness of transaction costs. For banks, it is a test of trust, transparency, and innovation as Nigeria continues its transition toward a fully digitized financial system. #7.5% VAT on Mobile, USSD Transfer: What It Means for Digital Banking#

