The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), in collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), is preparing to roll out a new refund framework that mandates near-real-time refunds for failed airtime and data transactions. The framework, which is awaiting final regulatory approvals, is expected to take effect on March 1, 2026.
Failed airtime and data purchases in which a user’s bank account is debited but no service is delivered have been among the most common consumer complaints in Nigeria’s telecoms ecosystem. According to the NCC, such complaints consistently rank among the top three issues raised by telecom subscribers.
Under the new framework, customers who are debited without receiving airtime or data will be entitled to an automatic refund within 30 seconds, regardless of whether the failure occurs at the bank level or within a telecom operator’s system. However, if transactions remain pending, refunds may take up to 24 hours.
The policy is the result of months of consultations between the NCC, the CBN, mobile network operators (MNOs), deposit money banks (DMBs), value-added service providers, and other industry stakeholders. These discussions were driven by growing user frustration over delayed or unresolved refunds, especially during network outages, system glitches, or errors caused by human input.
Beyond faster refunds, the framework introduces stricter accountability across the ecosystem. Telecom operators and banks will now be bound by enforceable service-level agreements that clearly define who is responsible when a transaction fails and outline the timeframe for its resolution.
Operators will also be required to notify customers via SMS about the success or failure of every airtime or data transaction.
The framework also addresses common user mistakes and edge cases, such as recharges sent to ported numbers, incorrect purchases, or transactions made to the wrong phone number.
To ensure compliance, the NCC and the CBN plan to jointly operate a central monitoring dashboard that tracks transaction failures, refund timelines, and service-level breaches in real time. This system is designed to help regulators quickly identify responsible parties and enforce penalties where necessary.
While the framework is yet to be fully implemented, regulators say operators and banks have already refunded customers more than ₦10 billion for failed transactions.
For Nigerian consumers, the move signals a shift toward faster resolutions and clearer protections in everyday digital payments, particularly for small but frequent transactions that power daily connectivity.









