Thursday, July 9, 2026
FB X LI YT
Breaking
⚖️🎓 Adetutu Gomez and Chiamaka Modestus have emerged as the Joint Female Best Graduating Students at the Nigerian Law School for the 2026 Call to Bar, after both earned First Class honours and outstanding academic records. How Each Region Chooses To Spend Its Resources 👇 BREAKING 🏆🇳🇬 : Fuji icons Saheed Osupa and KS1 Malaika joined history as Trench Symphony: The Dapper Live Experience earned Guinness World Records recognition for the largest orchestra ever assembled for an Afrobeats concert. 🤔 DID YOU KNOW? YORUBA Heritage 👏: Archaeological work at the Ita Yemoo site in Ile Ife has been completed, with the site now being transformed into an Interpretation Centre that will allow the public to experience one of the most important archaeological landscapes in Yoruba history. 🏆🎾 SEUN OGUNSAKIN IS A GRAND SLAM QUARTERFINALIST The Sharia Invasion – A Northern Agenda Poses an Existential Threat to Yoruba Land 🌍 IDERA Environmental Sanitation Corps Invites Volunteers For Community Sanitation Exercise
NEWS

JANUARY 1, 2026: Banks To Start Charging Nigerians ₦50 Stamp Duty On Every Transfers Above ₦10,000

December 31, 2025 2 min read

December 31, 2025
By Ayinde Adeleke

Starting from January 1, 2026, banks and other financial institutions in Nigeria will commence the deduction of a ₦50 stamp duty on all electronic transfers of ₦10,000 and above. This development follows the implementation of the new Tax Act, Newday Reporters has gathered.

The decision was communicated to customers through official notices issued by several Nigerian banks ahead of the policy’s take-off.

The charge, officially known as the Electronic Money Transfer Levy (EMTL), is a one-time ₦50 fee applied to electronic transfers or receipts of funds deposited in any commercial bank or financial institution, across all types of accounts, provided the transaction amount is ₦10,000 or more.

In a message sent to its customers on Tuesday, the United Bank for Africa (UBA) informed them that the ₦50 EMTL will now be uniformly referred to as “stamp duty” across all financial institutions. According to the bank, the stamp duty will apply to transactions of ₦10,000 and above, or their equivalent in foreign currencies.

UBA further clarified that certain transactions are exempt from the charge. These include salary payments and intra-bank self-transfers.

Importantly, the bank noted a key change in the application of the charge: the sender of the funds will now bear the ₦50 stamp duty, whereas previously the fee was deducted from the beneficiary or receiver of the transfer.

Access Bank also issued a similar notification to its customers, confirming the new charge and its mode of application.

Banks emphasized that the ₦50 stamp duty is separate from existing bank transfer fees and will be clearly indicated to customers at the point of making a transaction. They also reiterated that electronic transfers below ₦10,000 will not attract the stamp duty charge.