Nigeria’s banking industry is entering the final stretch of a sweeping recapitalisation exercise as lenders race to meet the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) deadline of March 31, 2026.
The CBN revised minimum capital thresholds in March 2024, requiring commercial banks with international licences to raise at least ₦500 billion, national banks ₦200 billion, and regional banks ₦50 billion. The policy is intended to strengthen financial system resilience, expand lending capacity and position banks to support economic growth.
Winners take early lead
Several tier-one lenders have already crossed the new benchmarks, signalling strong investor backing and strategic positioning. Access Bank and Zenith Bank have surpassed the ₦500 billion requirement, while Guaranty Trust Holding Company’s banking arm has also cleared the threshold through equity mobilisation. United Bank for Africa is similarly understood to have secured sufficient capital, subject to final regulatory confirmation.
Among national lenders, institutions such as Wema Bank, Stanbic IBTC, Globus Bank and PremiumTrust Bank have exceeded the ₦200 billion target. Non-interest lenders, including Jaiz Bank and Lotus Bank, have met their requirements, while some merchant and specialised banks have also secured compliance. Overall, industry figures indicate that more than a dozen banks have already achieved the recapitalisation standard, with many others raising fresh capital ahead of the deadline.
Strugglers are still under pressure
Despite progress, several lenders remain under pressure to close capital gaps. Unity Bank and Keystone Bank are among those pursuing rights issues, private placements or merger options to meet regulatory expectations. Foreign-affiliated institutions operating with national licences are also expected to inject significant capital or consider restructuring strategies to maintain compliance.
Regulatory signals suggest that failure to meet the requirements could result in licence downgrades, consolidation or market exit. Analysts note that while mergers present a viable pathway, they carry integration risks capable of affecting operational stability and customer confidence if not carefully executed.
Losses and sector reshaping ahead
The recapitalisation drive is expected to reshape Nigeria’s banking landscape. Well-capitalised lenders stand to emerge with stronger balance sheets and expanded lending capacity, reinforcing confidence among investors and depositors. Conversely, weaker institutions risk diminished market influence, forced consolidation or withdrawal from segments of the commercial banking space.
With the deadline drawing closer, the exercise is evolving into a defining test of resilience and strategic adaptation — determining which banks consolidate their advantage, which scale down operations, and which may disappear from the competitive frontline of the sector.

