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CBN tightens BVN rules and if you have a Nigerian bank account, these changes affect you directly. In a circular dated March 12, 2026, signed by the Director of Payments System Policy Department, Musa I. Jimoh, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced sweeping amendments to its Bank Verification Number (BVN) regulatory framework. Five critical changes take effect from May 1, 2026 and every Nigerian with a bank account needs to understand exactly what is changing, why it is changing, and what they must do before the deadline arrives.
1. What the CBN Just Changed — And Why It Matters
Nigeria’s BVN database now stands at 68.6 million enrolments as of March 2026, according to data from the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS). The BVN is the backbone of Nigeria’s banking identity infrastructure linking every customer’s biometric data to all their bank accounts across every licensed financial institution in the country.
But fraud has been escalating. SIM-swap scams, identity manipulation, underage registrations, and multiple fraudulent BVN enrolments have cost Nigerians billions of naira. The CBN’s response is decisive: tighten the BVN rules, close the loopholes, and make it significantly harder for criminals to hijack bank accounts.
The revised framework introduces five changes that go into effect on May 1, 2026. All banks, other financial institutions, and payment service providers operating in Nigeria have been directed to ensure full compliance. Here is everything you need to know.
2. Change 1 — You Can Only Update Your Phone Number Once. Ever.
This is the most consequential change in the new framework. Under the updated CBN BVN rules, you can only change the phone number linked to your BVN one time for the rest of your life.
Previously, customers could update their BVN-linked phone number multiple times at their bank branches. That flexibility is now gone permanently. From May 1, 2026, your registered mobile number becomes a long-term, near-permanent component of your banking identity.
Why? Because phone numbers are the single most exploited point of entry for bank fraud in Nigeria. Criminals use SIM-swap schemes where they fraudulently transfer a victim’s number to a new SIM to intercept OTPs, bypass authentication, and drain bank accounts. By making phone number changes a once-in-a-lifetime event, the CBN is effectively slamming this door shut.
What this means for you:
- If your BVN is currently linked to an old, inactive, or borrowed SIM fix it now, before May 1.
- Link your BVN to a secure, long-term number ideally one already tied to your National Identification Number (NIN).
- Once you use your one permitted change, there is no going back without exceptional regulatory approval involving extensive documentation.
3. Change 2 — The New 24-Hour Fraud Watchlist
The CBN has introduced a mandatory temporary fraud watchlist that all banks must now establish and maintain. Under this new rule, if any transaction linked to your BVN triggers a suspicious activity flag at any bank in the country your BVN can be placed on this watchlist for up to 24 hours.
During that 24-hour window, your accounts may be restricted or frozen while your bank contacts you directly to seek clarification. This means transfers, payments, or withdrawals you initiate could be halted mid-process while the bank verifies your identity and intent.
According to Nairametrics, the CBN stated: “A BVN may remain on this temporary Watch-list for a maximum period of twenty-four (24) hours, during which the BVN owner shall be contacted to provide clarification regarding the identified transaction(s).”
What this means for you:
- Always ensure your bank has your current, active phone number to reach you quickly.
- If your account is suddenly restricted, do not panic contact your bank immediately and cooperate with the verification process.
- Large or unusual transactions may be more likely to trigger a flag plan ahead for significant transfers.
4. Change 3 — One Device Only for Your Mobile Banking App
Under the new CBN BVN rules, your mobile banking app will now be restricted to one device at a time. If you log into your banking app on a new device a new phone, a tablet, or any other gadget your access on the previous device will be automatically deactivated.
The device switch will also trigger additional authentication checks to confirm your identity before the new device is approved. Furthermore, customers activating their banking app on a new device for the first time will face a temporary transaction limit of ₦20,000 within the first 24 hours a cooling-off period designed to prevent fraudulent activity on newly authorised devices.
What this means for you:
- If you regularly switch between multiple phones, expect friction plan your device changes carefully.
- When you get a new phone, make sure you have access to your registered BVN phone number to complete the authentication process.
- Budget for the ₦20,000 daily limit in the first 24 hours on any new device avoid scheduling large transfers on the same day as a device switch.
5. Change 4 — Minimum Age of 18 for BVN Enrolment
The CBN has set 18 years as the strict minimum age for BVN enrolment going forward. Minors will no longer be permitted to hold independent BVNs. This closes a loophole that has been exploited to create fraudulent youth identities within the banking system.
For parents and guardians, this means that managing financial accounts for children under 18 will now require structured banking products specifically designed for minors held in the guardian’s name rather than issuing independent BVNs to underage individuals.
According to BusinessDay Nigeria, the CBN intends this rule to strengthen identity verification and ensure BVN registration aligns with legally recognised age thresholds across all financial institutions.
6. Change 5 — Tighter Control Over Who Can Access BVN Data
The final critical change involves who can actually access Nigeria’s BVN database. Under the new framework, access to BVN data will be exclusively restricted to CBN-licensed financial institutions under strictly defined conditions set by the apex bank.
The CBN retains the right to approve access in exceptional circumstances consistent with applicable laws, but the default position is now one of strict gatekeeping. This directly addresses concerns about unauthorised third-party access to sensitive biometric and financial identity data.
For ordinary Nigerians, this means your BVN data your biometric information, linked accounts, and personal identity records is now under tighter regulatory protection than ever before. Institutions that access BVN data without authorisation face serious regulatory consequences.
7. What Every Nigerian Must Do Before May 1, 2026
The CBN tightens BVN rules are not optional they apply to every bank account holder in Nigeria, across every licensed financial institution including Access Bank, Zenith Bank, United Bank for Africa, and all others. Here is your action checklist before the May 1 deadline:
- ✅ Verify your BVN-linked phone number today. Log into your mobile banking app or visit your bank branch and confirm which number is registered. If it is old or inactive, update it now you only get one more chance.
- ✅ Link your phone number to your NIN. This adds an extra layer of identity security and aligns your records across government and banking databases.
- ✅ Ensure your bank has your current contact details. Your bank needs to be able to reach you instantly in the event of a fraud flag update your email and phone number on all accounts.
- ✅ Plan any mobile banking device changes before May 1. Avoid changing devices immediately around the deadline to prevent complications during the transition period.
- ✅ If you have children with BVNs, consult your bank. Understand what alternative products are available for managing minors’ finances under the new framework.
The CBN’s updated BVN framework represents the most significant overhaul of Nigeria’s banking identity system in years. Done right, it will make Nigerian bank accounts dramatically harder to defraud. But it also places new responsibilities on every account holder to take their banking security seriously starting now, before May 1.
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