CBN increases ATM withdrawal limit to N100k daily
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has increased cash withdrawal limits on all channels to N500,000 weekly for individuals and N5 million for corporates.
Announcing the policy revision in a circular on Tuesday, the regulator pegged automated teller machine (ATM) withdrawals at N100,000 daily, with a weekly cumulative withdrawal of N500,000.
The development is a major shift from tighter cash policy measures introduced under the previous administration.
In December 2022, the central bank, under Godwin Emefiele, its former governor, had directed deposit money banks and other financial institutions to limit over-the-counter cash withdrawals by individuals and corporate entities per week N100,000 and N500, 000, respectively.
The CBN, the latest policy reversal, also removed the cumulative deposit limit, saying the fee on excess deposit โshall no longer applyโ.
According to the regulator, the policies form part of efforts to moderate the rising cost of cash management, address security concerns, and โreduce the potential for money laundering associated with the economyโs heavy reliance on cashโ.
The bank said the policies, issued over the years in response to evolving circumstances in cash management, sought to reduce cash usage and encourage accelerated adoption of other payment options, particularly electronic payment channels.
However, with the โeffluxion of timeโ, the apex bank said the need has arisen to streamline the policiesโ provisions to reflect present-day realities.
โConsequently, effective January 1, 2026, the following cash-related policies, which are for mandatory compliance by all deposit-taking financial institutions in Nigeria, shall apply nationwide,โ the circular reads.
โThe cumulative deposit limit is hereby removed and the fee for excess deposit shall no longer apply.
โThe cumulative weekly withdrawal limit across all channels shall be N500,000 for individuals and N5 million for corporates. Cumulative weekly withdrawals above these limits shall attract excess withdrawal fees as indicated in โ5โ below.
โThe special authorisation for withdrawal of N5 million and N10 million once monthly by individuals and corporates, respectively, shall no longer apply.
โAutomated Teller Machine (ATM) withdrawal limit shall be N100,000 daily (per customer), subject to a maximum of N500,000 weekly. As indicated in โ2โ above, cash withdrawals from ATMs and point of sale devices are part of the weekly withdrawal limit indicated therein.
โExcess cash withdrawals (withdrawals above the levels indicated in โ2โ above) shall attract fees of 3 percent and 5 percent to individual and corporate customers, respectively, on the excess amount withdrawn. The fee shall be shared 40 percent to the CBN and 60 percent to the bank or financial institution.โ
CURRENCY DENOMINATION, REPORTING POLICIES
According to the circular, signed by Rita Sike, CBNโs director of financial policy and regulation department, said all currency denominations โmay be loaded in ATMsโ.
However, the CBN retained the limit on over-the-counter encashment of third-party cheques at N100,000.
โAccount holders are advised that any withdrawal under this section will form part of the cumulative weekly set in โ2โ aboveโ.
โBanks shall render the following monthly returns (in a format to be advised) to the respective supervisory departments (Banking Supervision Department, Other Financial Institutions Supervision Department and Payments System Supervision Department) as applicable:
โa . Returns on cash withdrawal transactions above the specified limit;
โb. Returns on Cash Deposits
โDeposit Money Banks (DMBs) shall create separate accounts to warehouse processing charges collected on cash withdrawals above the limits.
โThe following accounts/entities are exempted from the application of sections 2 and 5 of this circular:
โi. Revenue generating accounts of federal, state, and local governments; and
ii. Accounts of microfinance banks and primary mortgage banks with commercial and non-interest banks.
The CBN also said the exemption of embassies, diplomatic missions and aid-donor agencies from specific cash policies โshall no longer applyโ.

