As of July 2025, Nigeria recorded over 4.1 billion electronic transactions valued at ₦384 trillion, revealing the scale of the country’s digital growth.
But at the Nigeria Fintech Week (NFW) 2025, the country’s most influential fintech gathering, speakers made it known that beyond the data, trust, collaboration, and innovation will define the nation’s digital future.
For the first time in its history, the week-long event is being held simultaneously in Lagos, Enugu, and Port Harcourt, bolstering inclusion as well as national reach, as is aligned with the theme “The Fintech Ecosystem Symphony: Orchestrating Nigeria’s Digital Future.”
This year’s edition is held at the Landmark Event Centre, Victoria Island, Lagos, bringing regulators, innovators, investors, and policymakers under one roof to discuss the fintech sector’s scale and sustainability.
From Association to Movement
Opening the day’s proceedings, Dr Stanley Jacob, president of FintechNGR, described the association’s evolution from a small group of pioneers to a national force building solid grounds for finance.
“When Fintech Nigeria was set up, it wasn’t to sit back and watch,” he said. “It was to drive digital transformation for our financial landscape. We wanted to lead, and today, I can confidently say we are orchestrating that transformation.”
Dr Jacob noted that through its PIE Agenda — Participation, Innovation, and Expansion, FintechNGR has grown into a hub of activity with over 600 institutional members and 62 active volunteers driving impact.
“We are no longer just an association. We are now a movement,” he said.
He explained that the association’s five Communities of Practice — covering innovation, cybersecurity, inclusion, policy, and industry advocacy — now anchor its influence in both local and international fintech conversations. “We have created an ecosystem that doesn’t just respond to change; we drive it.”
Harmony Through Collaboration
Picking up that thread, Dr Jameelah Sharrieff-Ayedun, vice president of FintechNGR and chairperson of Nigeria Fintech Week 2025, noted that fintech’s progress depends on collaboration.
“Our ecosystem requires every instrument — regulators, innovators, investors, and consumers — to play their part,” she said. “This is more than a theme; it is a statement of intent.”
She noted that FintechNGR’s growing visibility in policy discussions is evidence of maturity. “We’re not just a ceremonial presence with regulators. We’re now recognised for our expertise and the value we bring to Nigeria’s financial and technology ecosystem,” she said.
Dr Sharrieff-Ayedun also stressed FintechNGR’s governance reforms, from data protection frameworks to transparency in operations, as part of building credibility. “Do not leave this week without making the deal you came to make. Like a symphony, we must all play in harmony.”

Africa Can Deliver to the World
Dr Segun Aina, chairman of the FintechNGR Board of Trustees and president of the Africa Fintech Network (AFN), lifted the discussion to the continental aspect, affirming that Nigeria’s fintech success is part of a bigger African story.
“Nigeria has four of the nine leading fintechs in Africa, and many more are on the way,” he said. “We are not just participating in the global fintech story, we are shaping it.”
He highlighted key AFN initiatives, including the Africa Fintech Hub, supported by the African Development Bank, and the Fintech Passporting Project, which aims to harmonise regulatory requirements across African countries.
“With standardised frameworks, it will be seamless for fintechs to operate from one African country to another,” he said. “Africa can deliver to the world, not as followers, but as creators.”
Trust as the New Currency
Representing CBN Governor Olayemi Cardoso, Dr Rakiya Opemi Yusuf, director of the Payments System Supervision Department, reiterated the Central Bank’s focus on balanced innovation.
“Like an orchestra, our fintech ecosystem requires harmony between innovation and regulation, inclusion and security,” she said. “Only through such balance can we advance trust and inclusion.”
She cited the ₦384 trillion figure as evidence of the deepening confidence in Nigeria’s financial technology systems. “The Central Bank embraces responsible innovation,” she said. “Compliance and trust are not barriers; they are the foundation of sustainability. When products are built on trust, they endure, and they attract investors.”
In alignment with this, Callistus Obetta, group executive, Technology & Services at First Bank of Nigeria, emphasised that trust is “the bedrock of financial services.”
“In today’s digital world, trust is our real currency,” he said. “AI should not replace human relationships, it should enhance them, allowing people to serve customers with empathy and purpose.”
Policy and People at the Core
Representing Senator Adetokunbo Abiru, Blessing Adeolu-Adediran of CCHub delivered a goodwill message that tied policy, innovation, and human capital together.
“The future of our nation will be shaped by the digital innovations of today,” she said. “This week reminds us that the Nigeria we envision tomorrow will be built by what we choose to do — or fail to do — now.”
She spotlighted the Sail Innovation Lab, a project that has trained over 9,000 young Nigerians in technology skills, as a practical model for inclusive growth.
One Vision, One Symphony
Nigeria’s fintech expansion has reached a point of harmony, between ambition and regulation, innovation and inclusion, policy and people.
Dr Stanley Jacob’s closing words at the Nigeria Fintech Week 2025 captured the spirit of the day: “Our mission continues, our vision remains clear, and our commitment is unwavering. Together, we will orchestrate Nigeria’s digital future.”