Friday, November 28, 2025 - The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has launched a sweeping crackdown on misleading marketing practices in the financial sector, directing all banks, payment service banks, and other regulated institutions to immediately withdraw any advertisement that violates consumer-protection and fair-marketing standards.
The directive, issued in a circular dated and signed by
Olubunmi Ayodele-Oni for the Director of the CBN’s Compliance Department,
follows a detailed thematic industry review that exposed widespread abuses in
how institutions communicate financial products to the public.
According to the apex bank, the review showed that many
adverts currently in circulation exaggerate benefits, omit critical
information, obscure inherent risks, or even rely on unaudited financial
statements—practices the CBN described as misleading, anti-competitive, and
harmful to market integrity.
The regulator stressed that such distortions not only
deceive consumers but also create an uneven playing field and erode confidence
in Nigeria’s financial system.
The CBN reminded financial institutions that all forms of
advertising must be factual, clear, balanced, and transparent, in line with the
Consumer Protection Regulations 2019 and the longstanding Guidelines on
Advertisements by Deposit-Taking Financial Institutions issued in 2000.
It specifically prohibited comparative, superlative, or
de-marketing claims—whether direct or indirect—warning that such tactics
misrepresent value and promote unfair competition.
Also banned are promotional schemes such as lotteries, prize
draws, lucky dips, and other chance-based inducements that could pressure
consumers into hasty or ill-informed financial commitments. According to the
circular, such incentives often distract from underlying product risks and can
manipulate vulnerable customers into making choices they do not fully
understand.
As part of a strengthened compliance framework, banks and
other regulated institutions must now provide the CBN with formal notifications
before releasing any advertisement or marketing content. The notification must
include details such as the duration of the campaign, the creative materials to
be aired or published, target audience demographics, geographic focus, and
written proof that both the compliance and legal departments have vetted and
approved the material.
Institutions must also submit evidence that the product or
service being advertised has already received approval from the CBN. However,
the central bank emphasized that this notification process should not be
misconstrued as prior approval or endorsement of the advert. Responsibility for
full compliance will continue to rest squarely with the advertising
institution.
In a strong warning to the industry, the CBN ordered all
banks and other regulated entities to immediately withdraw any existing advert
that fails to comply with the stipulated standards.
Furthermore, every institution must, within 30 days, submit
a detailed compliance attestation. This document is required to be jointly
signed by the Managing Director or Chief Executive Officer, the Executive
Compliance Officer, and the Chief Compliance Officer—an indication of the
seriousness with which the regulator expects institutions to treat the new
directive.
Industry operatives say the crackdown reflects the CBN’s
heightened focus on consumer protection, transparency, and ethical conduct amid
rising competition across banking, fintech, and digital payments.
Recent years have seen a surge in aggressive marketing,
particularly in the digital space, where some lenders and payment platforms
have been accused of making exaggerated claims about interest rates, loan
approvals, transaction speeds, and investment returns.
Analysts note that as new entrants vie for market share,
some have resorted to tactics that undermine disclosure obligations and expose
consumers to hidden costs or unrealistic promises.
By tightening advertising controls and reinforcing
accountability at the executive level, the CBN aims to restore discipline to
the marketplace and protect consumers from deceptive promotions that could
influence risky financial decisions.
The central bank’s insistence on evidence of product
approval also seeks to curb the growing trend of institutions marketing
unapproved or unverified offerings, especially in investment-linked services.
Compliance experts say the new rules could significantly
reshape how banks and fintechs communicate with customers, forcing a shift from
flashy, incentive-driven campaigns to more sober, fully transparent
messaging.
Marketing departments, they warn, will now be under pressure
to ensure that every claim is verifiable, every disclosure complete, and every
promotion vetted for regulatory consistency before it reaches the public.
For Nigeria’s financial institutions, the message from the
CBN is unmistakable: the era of aggressive, loosely regulated advertising is
over. With the threat of regulatory sanctions looming, institutions must now
align their marketing strategies with stringent consumer-protection
requirements or face consequences that could range from withdrawal of materials
to more severe compliance penalties.
As the compliance clock begins to tick, industry
stakeholders are expected to commence internal reviews of all existing and
upcoming campaigns to avoid breaches.
The coming weeks will likely determine how quickly the
sector adjusts to a stricter, more disciplined era of financial advertising—one
designed to protect consumers, promote fair competition, and uphold the
integrity of Nigeria’s financial marketplace.

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