airtime and data lending services – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Fri, 29 May 2026 08:55:10 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png airtime and data lending services – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 Regulatory Standoff Halts: Airtel and Glo Subscribers Can Borrow Airtime Again https://techeconomy.ng/airtel-and-glo-subscribers-can-borrow-airtime-again/ https://techeconomy.ng/airtel-and-glo-subscribers-can-borrow-airtime-again/#respond Fri, 29 May 2026 08:55:10 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=182396 A major regulatory friction point in Nigeria’s digital economy has temporarily eased as Airtel Nigeria and Globacom (Glo) officially restored their emergency airtime and data lending services.

The resumption follows a six-week suspension that frozen a critical mobile value-added service (VAS) market used by millions of subscribers.

The service restoration comes after the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) issued a public notice suspending the enforcement of its controversial Digital, Electronic, Online, or Non-Traditional (DEON) Consumer Lending Regulations 2025.

This regulatory backtrack was triggered by an interim injunction granted by the Federal High Court in Lagos, following a legal challenge spearheaded by the Wireless Application Service Providers Association of Nigeria (WASPAN).

The Roots of the Dispute: Overlapping Jurisdictions

The crisis began when the FCCPC expanded the interpretation of its DEON framework to classify deferred-payment telecom services, such as Globacom’s “Borrow Me Credit” and Airtel’s emergency credit advances, as conventional digital loans.

Under these rules, telecom operators and their technical partner platforms were classified as digital money lenders.

This expansion subjected them to aggressive credit-checking burdens, data privacy disclosures, and steep non-compliance penalties of up to ₦100 million or 1% of annual turnover.

The move faced immediate pushback from the telecom ecosystem. Telcos and value-added service providers argued that emergency airtime is an advance on services, not a cash loan product. They maintained that the sector is already strictly regulated under the statutory mandate of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).

In April, Dr. Aminu Maida, NCC executive vice chairman clarified the regulator’s stance, noting that airtime advances fall explicitly under telecom value-added services governed by the Nigerian Communications Act, rather than commercial consumer lending frameworks.

Current Network Status and Access Codes

While Airtel and Glo have fully reactivated their systems, market checks indicate that MTN Nigeria has not yet restored its airtime lending service, though industry insiders expect a resumption shortly as regulatory clearance is finalized.

Subscribers on the active networks can now access emergency credit lines using the harmonized USSD shortcodes previously mandated by the NCC:

  • Airtel Nigeria: Dial *303#
  • Globacom (Glo): Dial *303#

Why This Matters for the Digital Economy

The six-week freeze highlighted the growing challenge of regulatory overlap in Nigeria’s fast-evolving digital landscape, where fintech, telecommunications, and consumer commerce increasingly intersect.

For value-added service providers, the freeze threatened a multi-billion naira revenue stream. For the broader economy, the sudden withdrawal of micro-credit communication buffers directly impacted low-income subscribers relying on short-term credit lines during cash-flow shortages.

While the FCCPC has indicated its intent to legally challenge the interim court order, the current enforcement halt provides needed operational stability for telecom operators and immediate relief for millions of mobile consumers.

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