Lagos, Nigeria – In a major win for Nigerian consumers, United Bank for Africa (UBA) and Wema Bank have reactivated international transactions on naira debit cards—ending a five-year embargo that crippled online shopping, subscriptions, and travel spending.
What’s Changing?
UBA Premium Cards (Gold, Platinum, World) can now be used for:
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Online payments (Amazon, Netflix, Spotify)
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Global POS/ATM withdrawals
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Cross-border e-commerce
Wema Bank Naira Mastercard now supports dollar payments on:
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AliExpress, eBay, YouTube Premium
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International hotel bookings, flight tickets
No more forced dollar card requests – Customers can transact directly with naira balances (converted at prevailing FX rates).
Why Was It Banned Before?
2020–2024 FX Crisis:
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Banks blocked naira card international use due to dollar shortages and CBN forex restrictions.
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GTBank, Zenith, FirstBank, and fintechs (Flutterwave, Eversend) suspended services.
Why Now?
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Improved FX liquidity from CBN reforms (e.g., unified exchange rate).
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Bank profitability – UBA cited “foreign exchange gains” as enabling the move.
What Users Should Know
Fees & Rates:
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Transactions will convert naira to dollars at official market rates + bank charges.
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Expect 3–5% FX fees (check your bank’s tariff guide).
Limitations:
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No ATM withdrawals yet – Only online/POS transactions for now.
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Daily/monthly caps may apply (e.g., $500–$1,000 limits).
Industry Implications
Consumer Relief: Ends reliance on parallel market dollar cards (often 30% costlier).
Competitive Pressure: Other banks (GTB, Zenith, Access) may soon follow suit.
Diaspora Impact: Families abroad can send funds via naira card top-ups.
Quotes from the Banks
UBA:
“Rediscover the convenience and prestige of your UBA Premium Card globally.”
Wema Bank:
“Your Wema Naira Mastercard just went global—shop anywhere, pay in dollars!”
What’s Next?
More Banks to Join? Analysts expect Zenith, GTB to reactivate services by Q3 2025.
CBN Oversight: Will the central bank tighten FX access if demand surges?
Black Market Reaction: Parallel dollar rates may dip as demand shifts to official channels.