From “Move Fast” to “Comply Fast”: CBN’s New KYC/AML Enforcement for Fintechs

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has officially transitioned from advisory guidelines to strict enforcement of its 2026 AML/CFT/CPF standards, mandating that all fintechs implement Dynamic Risk Profiling.
From "Move Fast" to "Comply Fast": CBN’s New KYC/AML Enforcement for Fintechs From "Move Fast" to "Comply Fast": CBN’s New KYC/AML Enforcement for Fintechs
From "Move Fast" to "Comply Fast": CBN’s New KYC/AML Enforcement for Fintechs

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has officially transitioned from advisory guidelines to strict enforcement of its 2026 AML/CFT/CPF standards, mandating that all fintechs implement Dynamic Risk Profiling. Moving beyond the static “one-time BVN check,” financial institutions must now utilize automated systems that update a customer’s risk score in real-time based on live transactional behavior. This “Compliance First” regime aims to eliminate the “shadow economy” within the digital payment sector but presents a significant financial hurdle for mid-tier startups.

The End of Static Onboarding

Following a directive issued in March 2026, the regulator is cracking down on the fragmented KYC processes that allowed illicit funds to move through “tier-1” digital wallets. In the current landscape, simply verifying an ID is no longer sufficient; fintechs must now monitor the use of that ID across every transaction to detect “mule” accounts and sophisticated fraud patterns before they settle.

Real-Time Monitoring and the Tech Burden

The enforcement focuses on two main pillars: Automated Transaction Monitoring (ATM) and Sanctions Screening. Companies are required to flag anomalies—such as a sudden surge in high-value transfers on a historically dormant account—within seconds. For many, this necessitates integrating expensive, AI-driven compliance stacks that can cost upwards of 15% of total operational revenue.

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Conclusive Thoughts

As the CBN begins auditing implementation roadmaps this month, the message to the Techrectory community is clear: robust AML infrastructure is now the primary barrier to entry in Nigerian fintech. While the “Compliance-as-a-Service” (CaaS) utility may provide a lifeline, the move toward real-time risk profiling marks a permanent shift toward a more mature, albeit more expensive, financial ecosystem.

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