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Nigeria’s banks are reporting rising bad loans as the Central Bank of Nigeria closes the forbearance window that long cushioned their balance sheets. The shift has pushed the industry’s non-performing loan ratio above the regulator’s safety threshold and squeezed shareholder payouts.

What the bad loans numbers show
The sector’s non-performing loan ratio climbed from about 7.5 per cent at the end of 2025 and has kept rising as banks reclassify exposures they were previously allowed to treat softly. That sits well above the 5 per cent prudential limit the Central Bank uses as a comfort line for the system.
Nine banks have together declared trillions of naira in loan-loss provisions tied to forbearance exposures, with one widely cited figure putting the combined burden above N3 trillion. Those provisions eat directly into profit, which is why several lenders have had to hold back or trim dividends.
Why forbearance is ending
Forbearance was a temporary relief regime that let banks avoid marking some pandemic-era and single-obligor loans as bad straight away. The Central Bank stopped the COVID-related window in 2025 and has been steering lenders to fully apply normal loan-classification rules.
Regulators argue the clean-up is healthy. By forcing banks to show their true asset quality, the Central Bank says it is rebuilding balance-sheet transparency and putting the sector on firmer ground, even if the short-term optics look worse.
What it means for the banks
The immediate cost is lower headline profit and thinner dividends for investors who had grown used to strong bank payouts. Banks now have to set aside real money against loans they once carried at face value, and that provisioning reduces the cash available to reward shareholders.
The pressure also overlaps with the ongoing recapitalisation programme, which is pushing lenders to raise fresh capital to meet new minimum requirements. Banks juggling bigger provisions and bigger capital targets at the same time face a tighter, more demanding operating year.
Why it matters for the economy
A banking system carrying more visible bad loans can become cautious about new lending, which matters in an economy that needs credit to grow. If banks tighten loan books to protect capital, businesses and households may find borrowing harder and costlier.
For ordinary customers, the headlines can sound alarming, but the clean-up is mostly about how banks report loans rather than the safety of deposits. Nigerian lenders remain subject to capital rules and regulatory supervision, and the push for transparency is designed to make the system stronger, not weaker, over time.
Investors, though, have already felt the pinch. Bank shares have swung as the market digested the scale of the provisions, and dividend cuts have forced shareholders to reset expectations. Analysts say the next few earnings seasons will be closely watched for signs that the rise in bad loans is levelling off rather than building further.
Analysts are split on the outlook. Some see the rising non-performing loan ratio as a one-off adjustment that will settle once the forbearance loans wash through. Others warn that if economic conditions stay tough, fresh defaults could keep the ratio elevated. Either way, the era of flattering, forbearance-smoothed bank results is over, and the numbers Nigerian lenders publish from now on will look a lot more like the real thing.