HomeUncategorized“NEW WITHDRAWAL LIMITS: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW.

“NEW WITHDRAWAL LIMITS: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW.

For Individuals

You can withdraw up to ₦500,000 weekly across all channels: ATM, POS, or over the counter.

If you withdraw more than ₦500,000 in one week, you will pay a 3% fee on the excess amount only.

This is a cumulative limit. It doesn’t matter if you withdraw from multiple banks or multiple accounts. The CBN tracks withdrawals per individual across the banking system.

If you withdraw ₦700,000 in one week:

Allowed: ₦500,000

Excess: ₦200,000

Fee: 3% of ₦200,000 = ₦6,000

So you’ll pay ₦6,000 extra just for going above the limit.

For Businesses (Corporate Accounts)

Businesses can withdraw up to ₦5 million weekly.

Withdraw above this amount, and a 5% fee applies to the excess.

If a business withdraws ₦7 million in a week:

Allowed: ₦5 million

Excess: ₦2 million

Fee: 5% of ₦2 million = ₦100,000

About ATM Withdrawals

ATM withdrawals have their own daily limit (₦100,000 per day), but these withdrawals count toward your weekly ₦500,000 total.

So if you withdraw ₦100,000 from an ATM every day for 5 days, you’ve used your entire weekly limit by Friday. Any additional cash withdrawal that week, whether from an ATM, POS, or over the counter, will trigger the 3% excess fee.

What This Means for Your Daily Life

The impact will vary depending on how much you rely on cash. Here’s what to expect:

1. More people will depend on transfers and digital payments

Cash-heavy routines will become more expensive and inconvenient. Bank transfers, mobile money, and POS payments remain free and unlimited.

2. ATM availability may feel tighter

With the new ₦100k daily limit, more people will be queueing or withdrawing multiple times a week, potentially causing longer lines at ATMs.

3. Charges can add up quickly if you rely on frequent cash withdrawals

The new 3–5% excess fee is steep enough to force behaviour change. For context, if you consistently withdraw ₦800,000 weekly as an individual, you’ll pay ₦9,000 in fees every week, that’s ₦468,000 per year just in withdrawal penalties.

4. Small businesses that operate mostly in cash will need to adjust

Especially those that pay salaries, suppliers, or buy inventory with cash. A business that routinely needs ₦10 million in cash weekly will now pay ₦250,000 in fees every week (5% of the ₦5 million excess).

5. Planning becomes more important

Impulsive withdrawals may now come with unexpected charges. You’ll need to think ahead about your cash needs and time your withdrawals strategically.

6. Large one-time expenses require planning

Need ₦2 million cash for a land purchase? You could withdraw ₦500,000 weekly over 4 weeks to avoid fees, or pay the 3% fee (₦45,000) to get it all at once. Sometimes the fee might be worth paying for convenience or urgency.

What Hasn’t Changed (The Good News)

It’s easy to focus on restrictions, but here’s what remains the same or has improved:

Deposits are now completely free (previously there were deposit limits and fees)

Bank transfers remain free and unlimited – no restrictions on digital transfers

POS payments remain unaffected – paying merchants via POS doesn’t count toward withdrawal limits

Online/mobile banking remains the same – bill payments, subscriptions, and digital transactions are unchanged

Cash is still legal tender – you can use it for any transaction; you just face limits on withdrawing large amounts

How to Avoid Excess Withdrawal Fees (3–5%)

Here are practical ways to stay within limits and minimise fees:

 

1. Reduce reliance on physical cash

Use bank transfers, POS, or online payments wherever possible. Most merchants now accept digital payments.

 

 

2. Spread your cash withdrawals across weeks

Instead of taking out ₦800,000 at once (which triggers ₦9,000 in fees), withdraw ₦400,000 one week and ₦400,000 the next week. If you can plan, this saves significant money.

 

 

3. Use digital wallets or bank transfers for recurring expenses

School fees, rent, subscriptions, utility bills, pay these digitally instead of withdrawing cash to pay them. Most schools, landlords, and service providers now accept transfers.

 

 

4. Keep your emergency fund digital

Emergencies often force large, sudden withdrawals, which now attract fees. If your emergency fund is in a savings account or investment that allows quick transfers, you can move money digitally without hitting withdrawal limits.

 

 

5. Pay suppliers and vendors via transfer

For businesses, negotiate to pay suppliers through bank transfers rather than cash. This avoids the 5% business withdrawal fee and creates better accounting records.

 

 

6. Consider splitting payment methods

If you need ₦1 million for a transaction, you might withdraw ₦500,000 (avoiding fees) and arrange a bank transfer for the remaining ₦500,000.

 

 

7. Understand that splitting across accounts doesn’t help

The CBN tracks withdrawals per individual across all banks. Withdrawing ₦300,000 from Bank A and ₦300,000 from Bank B in the same week still totals ₦600,000, triggering fees on the ₦100,000 excess.

 

 

 

How Digital Financial Tools Can Help

With the new CBN rules, managing money digitally becomes essential. Digital financial tools can help you:

 

Organise spending money digitally: Hold daily funds in digital wallets or savings accounts

Plan big expenses: Set money aside gradually for major commitments

Automate cash flow: Schedule regular savings to avoid last-minute withdrawals

Rely less on ATMs: Keep money accessible digitally without hitting withdrawal caps

Build better habits: Nigeria is shifting toward digital finance; adapting early helps avoid

 

What Nigerians Should Expect Going Forward

Cash will continue to be available, but controlled: You can still use cash; you just face limits on large withdrawals.

Digital payments will keep growing: They’re the cheaper, easier alternative for most transactions.

Businesses and individuals who adjust early will avoid unnecessary fees: Those who resist change will pay thousands or even millions in excess withdrawal fees.

Financial planning will matter more than ever: Knowing your cash needs in advance and timing withdrawals strategically becomes crucial.

Tools that help you manage money digitally will become essential: Whether it’s your bank’s mobile app, a digital wallet, or investment platforms, comfort with digital money management is no longer optional.

Nigeria isn’t eliminating cash, but the direction is clear: using large amounts of cash will now come with limits and, often, extra costs.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

 

1. Is the CBN trying to ban cash?

No. Cash remains legal tender and will continue to be available. However, the CBN is deliberately making large cash transactions more expensive to encourage digital payments, which are cheaper to manage, more transparent, and harder to use for money laundering. This is part of a global trend toward cashless economies.

 

 

2. Can I still withdraw more than ₦500k in a week as an individual?

Yes, but you will pay a 3% fee on the amount above ₦500k. There’s no absolute prohibition; it just becomes more expensive. If you need the cash urgently, you can get it, but it will cost you.

 

 

3. Are ATM withdrawals part of the weekly limit?

Yes. ATM, POS cash back, and over-the-counter withdrawals all count toward your weekly ₦500,000 limit. The ATM has a separate daily limit (₦100,000), but those daily withdrawals accumulate toward your weekly limit.

 

 

4. Can businesses withdraw more than ₦5 million weekly?

Yes, but they must pay a 5% excess withdrawal fee on amounts above ₦5 million. For a business regularly withdrawing ₦10 million weekly, that’s ₦250,000 in fees every week, or ₦13 million per year.

5. Are deposits still charged?

No. The CBN has removed all deposit fees. You can deposit any amount of cash at no charge. This is actually good news and makes the banking system more accessible for depositors.

6. What if I withdraw from multiple banks?

It doesn’t matter. The CBN tracks withdrawals per individual (or per business) across the entire banking system. Withdrawing ₦300,000 from three different banks in one week totals ₦900,000, triggering fees on the ₦400,000 excess

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Final Thoughts

You don’t need to panic. You only need to understand the new rules and adjust your habits accordingly.

As Nigeria continues its shift toward digital payments, planning your money, not just spending it, becomes even more important. The most successful individuals and businesses will be those who embrace digital financial tools early, plan their cash needs strategically, and view these changes as an opportunity to build better financial habits.

The policy is designed to make cash more expensive and digital money more attractive. By understanding how the system works and adapting your behaviour, you can minimise fees, reduce your reliance on physical cash, and position yourself for success in Nigeria’s evolving financial landscape.

For those who plan, this transition can be smooth and even beneficial. For those who resist, the fees will add up quickly. The choice is yours.

Compliment of the season

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