Loading stock data...

FG’s electronic money transfer revenue rose by 107% in Dec powered by Opay, Moniepoint, other fintechs

By: Author Africa

February 5, 2025

2 minute read

The Federal Government’s revenue on the Electronic Money Transfer Levy (EMTL) surged to N31.2 billion in December 2024 following the introduction of the levy to transactions made on Fintech platforms, making it the highest of any month.

The record, contained in revenue-sharing data released by the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC), explained that the December revenue surpassed the N15.046 billion recorded in November by 107 per cent. This increase was spurred by the inclusion of financial technology platforms like Opay, Kuda, Moniepoint and others into the tax net.

The levy, introduced under the Finance Act 2020, was announced to take effect from September 9. In a notice sent to its users on September 7, Opay emphasized that the levy was imposed by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) with no benefit to the company.

The electronic money transfer levy is a one-time N50 e-levy charge on transactions above N10,000. It applies to all electronic transfers of funds in a Nigerian-licensed bank or financial institution. The levy, previously applicable only to commercial banks, has now been extended to fintech companies which has now ended the era of free banking services that many of these platforms offered

In addition, revenues from the electronic money transfer levy are distributed among the government tiers with the Federal Government receiving 15%, state governments receiving 50%, and local governments getting 35%.

More projected gains from the electronic money transfer levy

The document, which provides details of the historical performance of budget forecasts and estimates of government revenues and expenditures also stated that Nigerian bank customers paid a total of N133.89 billion as levy between January and August 2024. This represents 76.5 per cent of the N175.11 billion forecasted for the entire year.

In addition, it also revealed that N169.43 billion was realised from the e-levy in 2023, up from the N136.35 billion projected. The paper also shows that the 2024 retained revenue for the same period was N9.83 trillion, while N12.84 trillion was recorded for last year. However, the total revenue for 2025 was estimated at N34.82 trillion, 34.6 per cent more than the 2024 projected revenue.

With the N31.2 billion generated in December, the government is on the run to achieve its N230 billion revenue projection on EMTL for 2025. Meanwhile, it targets more revenue from the e-levy.

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Category

Feature Posts

If you’d like to get featured on our Entrepreneur Spotlight, click here to share your startup story with us.

newsletter icon

Africa Innovation Watch Newsletter

Get the best of Africa’s daily tech to your inbox – first thing every morning.

Join the community now!