Nigeria’s financial technology landscape is facing a pivotal moment where digital aesthetics must give way to functional reliability.
According to the newly released State of UX in Financial Apps: Nigeria Report 2025 by Interswitch, the days of winning customers with sleek interfaces alone are over.
The report, which draws on extensive user research, surveys, and evaluations of leading platforms, reveals that while Nigerians are increasingly comfortable with digital banking, their expectations for speed, transparency, and support have hit an all-time high.
The ‘Help’ Crisis: A 71% Failure Rate
The most striking finding of the 2025 report is a massive breakdown in digital customer service. A staggering 71% of Nigerians surveyed described the help options within their financial apps as ineffective.
Despite the industry’s push toward automation and AI-driven chatbots, users frequently cited:
- Vague Error Messages: Notifications that fail to explain why a transaction failed.
- Lack of Real-Time Guidance: Difficulty in getting immediate resolution for time-sensitive issues.
- Complex Interfaces: Support journey paths that feel like a maze rather than a solution.
The data suggests that while core transactions like transfers generally perform well, secondary tasks like bill payments and airtime purchases still suffer from significant usability friction.
UX is the Product, Not the Wrapper
Speaking on the launch, Cherry Eromosele, executive vice president, Group Marketing and Communications at Interswitch, emphasized that user experience has evolved from a cosmetic layer into the core value proposition of financial institutions.
“User experience is no longer a cosmetic layer in financial services, it is the product itself,” Eromosele noted. “Trust, simplicity, and reliability are what truly differentiate one platform from another… improving experience is essential to deepening inclusion and sustaining the next phase of digital finance growth.”
Benchmarking Against Global Standards
Interswitch utilized globally recognized usability principles, including those developed by UX pioneer Jakob Nielsen, to audit the Nigerian ecosystem.
The study evaluated apps based on:
- System Feedback: How well the app communicates its status to the user.
- Error Prevention: Designing systems that stop mistakes before they happen.
- Flexibility & Accessibility: Ensuring the app works for diverse user needs across various socio-economic classes.
While the report notes progress in transparency and reliability, it highlights a massive opportunity for banks and fintechs to win long-term loyalty by adopting more human-centered design frameworks.
The Bottom Line
As an infrastructure giant connecting banks, fintechs, and merchants, Interswitch’s report serves as a health check for the $1 trillion economy’s digital pipes.
The message for 2026 is clear: the winners in the next phase of Nigeria’s digital revolution will not be those with the most features, but those who can make their existing features understandable, trustworthy, and supportive.
Techeconomy’s view: For investors and stakeholders in the fintech space, this report underscores a shift in Capex priorities.
To maintain market share, financial institutions must pivot from aggressive customer acquisition to retention strategies centered on robust, real-time in-app support and error-handling infrastructure.




