One year ago, Sterling Bank performed a radical experiment on its balance sheet by becoming the first major Nigerian lender to scrap digital transfer fees. Today, as the policy hits its first anniversary, the data reveals a massive win for the consumer: over ₦2 billion has been returned to Nigerians in saved transaction costs.
The Strategy: Growth Over “Grains” Launched on April 1, 2025, the Zero Transfer Fees policy on the OneBank app wasn’t just a promotion—it was a total pivot. CEO Abubakar Suleiman noted that the bank made a “conscious decision” to stop profiting from the mere movement of money. By removing the friction of ₦10, ₦25, or ₦50 charges, Sterling saw a massive spike in transaction volumes and deeper engagement from small businesses and digital-first users.
How They Pulled It Off Most banks rely on these fees to pad their non-interest income, but Sterling’s ability to survive without them is rooted in its technological independence. The bank successfully:
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Ditched Legacy Systems: Switched to a wholly homegrown core banking platform.
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Scaled via Cloud: Built a private cloud environment that handles millions of “free” transactions without the high overhead costs of foreign software licenses.
The Impact by the Numbers
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₦2 Billion: Total estimated savings returned to customers’ pockets.
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12 Months: The duration the policy has been sustained despite market skepticism.
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The “Fairness” Factor: CMO Donatus Okpako highlighted that this initiative proves a bank can be “commercially sound while being fundamentally fair.”
The Ripple Effect Industry observers say Sterling has effectively “spoiled the market” for traditional banking models. By proving that a high-volume, zero-fee model is sustainable through superior tech, they have forced a broader conversation across the Nigerian financial sector regarding transparency and value.
As the bank enters Year 2 of the policy, the focus is shifting toward expanding this “fairness” model into credit and savings, signaling that the era of “death by a thousand hidden charges” might finally be under threat.
