Nigeria sets April 2026 rollout for Telco compensation over dropped calls, outages
Nigeria will begin enforcing a new rule in April 2026 requiring telecom operators to compensate subscribers for poor service quality, a move that signals a decisive shift toward consumer protection in one of Africa’s largest telecom markets.
Nigeria will begin enforcing a new rule in April 2026 requiring telecom operators to compensate subscribers for poor service quality, a move that signals a decisive shift toward consumer protection in one of Africa’s largest telecom markets.
The Nigerian Communications Commission said the policy is part of a broader effort to place consumers at the centre of regulation, as mobile connectivity becomes increasingly critical to business operations, financial transactions, and everyday communication.
The new framework will require operators to provide compensation for service failures such as dropped calls, persistent network outages, and slow data speeds, issues that have long frustrated millions of users across the country.
“When service quality is poor, the consequences affect productivity, commercial activities, and even public confidence in our communications system,” the Commission said, underscoring the economic risks tied to unreliable connectivity.
The April 2026 rollout marks a break from the regulator’s previous approach, which largely relied on imposing fines on operators that failed to meet key performance indicators. While those penalties generated revenue and enforced compliance, they did not directly address the losses suffered by subscribers.
Under the new system, affected users will receive compensation, effectively transferring part of the accountability burden directly to telecom companies. The shift aligns Nigeria with global regulatory trends that prioritise consumer restitution over punitive enforcement.
Analysts say the move could drive stronger competition among operators on service quality, while also forcing more disciplined investment in network infrastructure and maintenance.
The directive comes as telecom operators face mounting operational challenges that continue to undermine service delivery despite heavy capital expenditure.
Chief among these is the high rate of fibre optic cable cuts, a persistent issue linked to road construction, vandalism, and poor coordination with public infrastructure projects. The Commission said operators recorded an average of 1,100 fibre cuts weekly last year, a level of disruption that frequently leads to widespread outages.
Such incidents often trigger cascading failures across networks, given the central role of fibre in carrying voice and data traffic nationwide.
Operators are also contending with rising energy costs, foreign exchange volatility, and regulatory levies, all of which have increased the cost of maintaining and expanding network capacity.
While the compensation policy is expected to improve consumer confidence and accountability, it introduces new financial risks for operators already navigating a high-cost environment.
Industry stakeholders say the success of the April rollout will depend on clear guidelines around compensation thresholds, enforcement mechanisms, and collaboration between telecom firms and government agencies to reduce infrastructure damage.
For Nigeria’s fast-growing digital economy, where connectivity underpins sectors from fintech to e-commerce, the stakes are high.
