On 1 December, the Nigerian government began deducting a ₦50 electronic levy (E-Levy) from transactions conducted through financial technology platforms like Opay and Moniepoint. In September, The New Daily Prime reported that Opay and other fintech companies had announced plans to impose a ₦50 charge on customer transfers of ₦10,000 and above. The companies clarified that these charges are not a source of revenue for the payment platforms but are mandated by President Bola Tinubu’s administration as part of government policy. The electronic levy (E-Levy) is a tax imposed on digital financial transactions. Its purpose is typically to generate revenue by taxing electronic payments, transfers, and other forms of monetary activities conducted online. Such policies are often introduced in nations transitioning to cashless economies to capitalise on the increasing adoption of digital payment systems. On Sunday, online banks implemented the E-Levy deductions, sparking widespread controversy. Many Nigerians have expressed outrage, questioning the federal government’s decision to introduce yet another tax burden. One X user, Abino, criticised President Tinubu’s administration, claiming it has mismanaged oil revenues and is now resorting to excessive taxation on citizens. It's obvious, Oil money don finish …Na taxing left and right 👍🏽— Non-Fungible ABINO 👨🏻🍳 (@AB_i_NO) December 2, 2024 According to Mercy Akuma, the electronic levy charge introduced by Mr Tinubu’s administration stems from the belief that platforms like OPAY have a large customer base, prompting the federal government to capitalise on this opportunity. Because opay now have customers, federal government decided to go there🙄— Mercy data- vendor (@gold_06768) December 2, 2024 Another X user, Dearest Jessica, argued that the funds generated from the levy would not be judiciously utilized for the nation’s development but would instead be redirected to pay politicians exorbitant salaries and finance their luxurious lifestyles. https://twitter.com/TrulyDearest_/status/1863541665664807137?t=QbNEBPDWguFw2WawK25KRA&s=19 https://twitter.com/TrulyDearest_/status/1863541665664807137?t=QbNEBPDWguFw2WawK25KRA&s=19 Below are other comments They will start increasing Pos charges This is not good at all— Digitalbimpe (@digitalbimpe) December 2, 2024 @OPay_NG I think I will close my account with you guys with this news cos this news is not for me. Thanks— Sunday♥️🦅 (@Sunnajsticks) December 2, 2024 Una get mind o. But I think it's time to send money 2 times and boycott the 50 naira deduction. I only transfer money to opay when I need it.— Omotayo Olokede (@Iamkolotayo) December 2, 2024 9,990 go too suffer sha— brains (@_brainsofweb3) December 2, 2024 Until they finally drain all of us ..Who did we offend in this country??— Non-Fungible ABINO 👨🏻🍳 (@AB_i_NO) December 2, 2024 I got this message from PalmPay yesterday o, I think say na prank. I’m deleting the app I no do again— PACK (@allowspace) December 2, 2024 https://twitter.com/limah_sparkles/status/1863816767274955040?t=d-n1fKZHAxx2wvCHH771Zw&s=19 This entire administration has largely focused on squeezing the little left— TheRevolutionary (@ChinonsoIhekire) December 2, 2024 This man sha wan finish everybody— LamiLekan (@CertifiedAnelka) December 2, 2024 Who did we offdend— TAIWO OLORUNFEMI SAMUEL (@TaiwoOloru61582) December 3, 2024 Very easy to avoid paying the charges especially those transferring from Opay to Opay. If you want to transfer 30k for example, send 9,500 thrice and 1,500. Don't pay any unnecessary charges, this government wants to milk us in every way they can— W.I.P (@Tunde_tide) December 2, 2024 Post navigation PENCOM permits low-income earners to withdraw total retirement savings Minimum wage strike grounds three states, FCT