Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements in Nigeria are governed by the CBN's three-tier KYC framework, the MLPPA 2022, and CBN circulars on Bank Verification Number (BVN) and National Identity Number (NIN) linkage. Every account opened at a CBN-licensed institution must be classified under one of the three tiers, with transaction limits and verification requirements that increase with each tier.
| Tier | Verification required | Daily transaction limit | Balance limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | BVN or NIN linkage; self-declaration of name, address, and date of birth | NGN 30,000 | NGN 300,000 |
| Tier 2 | Government-issued photo ID (national ID card, driver's licence, international passport, or voter's card) plus address verification | NGN 500,000 | NGN 500,000 |
| Tier 3 | Full KYC: Tier 2 requirements plus liveness check, source of income/funds documentation, and beneficial ownership verification where applicable | No limit | No limit |
Since December 2023, the CBN requires that all Tier 2 and Tier 3 accounts must have both BVN and NIN linked. Accounts that had only one of these must be updated. Institutions cannot upgrade a customer from Tier 1 to Tier 2 or above without confirming both identifiers are present and valid.
The BVN is an 11-digit unique identifier issued by NIBSS (Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System) to bank customers. It links a customer's biometric data — fingerprints and facial image — to their banking identity across all Nigerian financial institutions. A customer can only have one BVN regardless of how many accounts they hold across different banks.
BVN is used to verify that a person exists in the banking system, cross-check identity across institutions, and detect individuals who have been flagged for financial crime. The CBN requires all account holders to have a linked BVN except for the most basic Tier 1 accounts, which can be opened with NIN as an alternative.
The NIN is an 11-digit unique identifier issued by the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC). It is linked to biometric data collected at NIMC enrolment centres and serves as Nigeria's primary national identity credential. Unlike the BVN, which is banking-specific, the NIN is a general-purpose identity number used across government services.
The CBN's December 2023 directive requiring both BVN and NIN for Tier 2 and above accounts strengthened identity verification by requiring customers to be verified against both the banking system's biometric database (BVN/NIBSS) and the national identity database (NIN/NIMC).
Corporate accounts require a different KYC process that includes verification of the entity's legal existence, beneficial ownership, and the authority of the individuals acting on its behalf:
KYC is not a one-time event. The CBN requires institutions to conduct periodic reviews of customer information based on risk level. High-risk customers (including PEPs) must be reviewed at least annually. Medium-risk customers at least every two years. Low-risk customers every three to five years. Any material change in customer circumstances — change of address, change of business activity, large increase in transaction volume — should trigger an ad hoc review outside the regular cycle.
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