Recent news about the introduction of a 7.5 percent VAT on mobile bank transfers and USSD transactions have triggered widespread concern among Nigerians, with many fearing that the government is about to deduct a portion of their actual transfer amounts. However, a closer look at the directive shows that much of the panic is rooted in misunderstanding rather than the reality of the policy.
The directive, which takes effect on January 19, 2026, was communicated to customers by several financial institutions, including fintech platforms such as Moniepoint, and is backed by government tax authorities. Headlines suggesting that Nigerians will lose 7.5 percent of every transfer have circulated rapidly, but experts and financial analysts say this interpretation is inaccurate.

What the 7.5 Percent VAT Actually Applies To
Contrary to popular belief, the 7.5 percent VAT is not charged on the money being transferred, also known as the principal amount. Instead, it applies strictly to the service fee charged by banks and fintech companies for facilitating the transaction.
For example, when a customer sends โฆ100,000 through a bank transfer, the bank typically charges a service fee, often around โฆ50. The VAT is calculated only on that โฆ50 fee, not on the โฆ100,000 itself. At 7.5 percent, the VAT on a โฆ50 service charge comes to โฆ3.75. This means the customerโs total cost becomes โฆ100,103.75 after adding the standard โฆ50 electronic money transfer levy.
This clarification shows that the actual impact on customers is minimal and far from the alarming figures being shared online. Financial experts emphasize that the policy does not reduce savings or directly tax personal income through transfers.
USSD transactions follow the same structure. If a USSD banking session costs โฆ20, the 7.5 percent VAT amounts to โฆ1.50, bringing the total session cost to โฆ21.50. Analysts describe the increase as marginal, noting that it represents a few extra naira rather than a substantial financial burden.
Why the VAT Is Being Applied
According to explanations from tax professionals, the move is part of efforts by the Nigeria Revenue Service to ensure that digital services are properly captured within the tax system. Just as VAT is applied to data subscriptions, airtime, and other services, digital banking services are now being treated the same way.

The governmentโs position is that VAT is being charged on the service provided by banks, not on customersโ money. This distinction is critical, especially as Nigeria continues to expand its digital economy and reduce reliance on cash-based transactions.
Despite these explanations, the announcement has sparked debate online, with some Nigerians accusing the government of introducing hidden charges during a period of economic pressure. Others argue that clearer public communication would have prevented confusion and panic.
Financial institutions have begun issuing notices to customers explaining the charges in simpler terms, in an effort to calm fears and correct misinformation. Analysts say transparency will be key as the implementation date approaches.
While public debate continues, the core message remains that the 7.5 percent VAT on transfers is not a deduction from transferred funds, but a tax on transaction fees already charged by financial service providers.





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