A regulatory tussle that could shape the future of Nigeria’s fast-expanding digital credit market has taken a significant turn, after a Federal High Court in Lagos refused to vacate an interim order restraining the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission from enforcing parts of its consumer lending regulations.
The ruling effectively preserves the status quo for telecom-linked digital credit operators — including providers of airtime lending and data advance services — while the court examines whether the commission has overstepped its statutory powers.
Court declines FCCPC request
Justice A. Lewis-Allagoa of the Federal High Court ruled that an earlier injunction granted on April 15 will remain in place until the substantive case is heard.
The case, filed by the Wireless Application Service Providers Association of Nigeria (WASPAN), challenges portions of the Digital, Electronic, Online or Non-Traditional Consumer Lending Regulations 2025 introduced by the FCCPC.
When proceedings resumed on April 28, the commission urged the court either to accelerate hearing on the matter or lift the interim order blocking enforcement of the disputed provisions. WASPAN opposed that move, arguing that the FCCPC had only recently filed its preliminary objection and that it required time to prepare a proper legal response.
The association also warned that removing the injunction at this stage would allow enforcement of regulations whose legality is still under judicial review.
After hearing both parties, Justice Lewis-Allagoa rejected the FCCPC’s application and ordered that both the substantive suit and the regulator’s preliminary objection be heard together. The matter was adjourned to May 15, 2026.
Why the case matters
At the heart of the dispute is a wider question about regulatory boundaries in Nigeria’s digital economy: who has the legal authority to oversee telecom-based lending products?
WASPAN contends that aspects of the FCCPC’s rules encroach on the jurisdiction of the Nigerian Communications Commission, which already regulates licensed telecom service providers and related value-added services. The group also argues that some compliance requirements under the lending regulations could impose operational burdens on providers already subject to sector-specific oversight.
The FCCPC maintains that its intervention is necessary to curb abusive lending practices, improve transparency, and protect consumers in a rapidly growing digital lending ecosystem that has often been criticised for opaque terms, aggressive debt recovery tactics, and weak disclosure standards.
Growing scrutiny of digital credit
Nigeria’s digital lending market has expanded sharply over the past five years, driven by fintech innovation, mobile phone penetration, and demand for quick, collateral-free borrowing. Airtime lending and data advance services have become especially popular among lower-income users who rely on short-term digital credit to stay connected.
But that growth has also drawn increased regulatory scrutiny.
Authorities have been under pressure to tighten oversight of digital lenders over complaints involving excessive charges, misuse of personal data, and consumer exploitation. The FCCPC’s 2025 regulations were widely seen as part of that broader push. What was less clear — and is now before the court — is whether those rules extend into areas already covered by telecom regulation.
Implications for consumers and operators
For now, the ruling means operators can continue offering airtime credit, data advance, and related digital lending products without disruption from the disputed FCCPC provisions.
For consumers, there is no immediate change in service access. However, the longer-term outcome could determine how these products are supervised, what consumer protections apply, and which agency ultimately sets the rules.
For investors and operators, the case introduces a familiar concern in Nigeria’s business environment: regulatory overlap. Conflicting directives from agencies have frequently created uncertainty in sectors ranging from financial technology to broadcasting and telecommunications.
What comes next
The May 15 hearing is expected to move beyond procedural arguments and address the substantive legal question of jurisdiction. Legal observers say the eventual ruling may become an important precedent for how overlapping regulatory mandates are interpreted in Nigeria’s increasingly interconnected digital economy.
Until then, enforcement of the disputed FCCPC lending rules remains suspended — and the contest over who regulates digital credit in Nigeria remains unresolved.














