Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Finance
    • Economy
  • Entertainment
  • Governance
  • Metro
  • Sports
  • More
    • Environment
    • Security
    • Crime
    • Accident
    • Education
    • Banking
    • Religion
    • Health
  • About Us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Insight Global NewsInsight Global News
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • News
    Featured

    Ajiran Killings: CHSR Commend Police Progress, Rebuke Sycophantic Group, Seek Thorough Investigation

    By Oluwatoyin MathnuelApril 22, 20260
    Recent

    Ajiran Killings: CHSR Commend Police Progress, Rebuke Sycophantic Group, Seek Thorough Investigation

    April 22, 2026

    ORAN Rejoices with Olakunle Aderinokun @ 55

    April 21, 2026

    Statewide Raid: Delta Police Arrest Drug Dealers, Recover Cache of Hard drugs

    April 20, 2026
  • Politics
    Featured

    Lagos: Coalition of Civil Societies Task APC on Credible Candidate for Kosofe Federal Constituency-

    By Oluwatoyin MathnuelApril 22, 20260
    Recent

    Lagos: Coalition of Civil Societies Task APC on Credible Candidate for Kosofe Federal Constituency-

    April 22, 2026

    Aganga-Williams Wins Support from Alaba Traders at Borehole Commissioning by Deputy Governor

    April 18, 2026

    Empathy, Commitment in Political Mentorship: Missing Link in Nigeria’s Leadership; Olatunji advocates Redefined Leadership in politics.

    April 2, 2026
  • Business
    1. Finance
    2. Economy
    Featured

    MREIF is Better: FirstBank’s Mortgage Loan Is the Game-Changer for Home Ownership in Nigeria

    By Oluwatoyin MathnuelApril 23, 20260
    Recent

    MREIF is Better: FirstBank’s Mortgage Loan Is the Game-Changer for Home Ownership in Nigeria

    April 23, 2026

    Nestlé Nigeria, Federal Ministry of Livestock Development Partner to Establish Dairy Technical Skills Development Centre

    April 21, 2026

    Meet 10 Contestants Cooking for Glory on MasterChef Nigeria.

    April 20, 2026
  • Entertainment
    Featured

    Adron Homes Champions Cultural Heritage at Ibadan Cultural Festival 2026

    By Oluwatoyin MathnuelApril 17, 20260
    Recent

    Adron Homes Champions Cultural Heritage at Ibadan Cultural Festival 2026

    April 17, 2026

    Wema Bank Set to Sponsor Celebrity Performance At Couple’s Wedding

    February 15, 2026

    Iworo FM 96.3 Celebrates First Anniversary in Grand Style

    February 9, 2026
  • Governance
    Featured

    NAWOJ Lagos Joins Statewide Rally to Demand Passage of Reserved Seats for Women Bill

    By Oluwatoyin MathnuelMarch 25, 20260
    Recent

    NAWOJ Lagos Joins Statewide Rally to Demand Passage of Reserved Seats for Women Bill

    March 25, 2026

    Lent, Ramadan Season: Akintunde Fetes Constituents, Distributes Gifts

    March 12, 2026

    Oyo: Akintunde congratulates Amb. Florence Ajimobi on Posting, Expresses Confidence in Capacity for Excellent Representation

    March 7, 2026
  • Metro
    Featured

    Fatal Collision: Otedola Bridge Consumes Dispatch Rider, Lastma Strengthens Traffic Control

    By Oluwatoyin MathnuelApril 22, 20260
    Recent

    Fatal Collision: Otedola Bridge Consumes Dispatch Rider, Lastma Strengthens Traffic Control

    April 22, 2026

    Fatal Crash Claims Dispatch Rider’s Life; LASTM’s Swift Response Prevent Further Tragedy

    April 21, 2026

    Forging Excellence On Front Lines: How Strategic Training Reengineer LASTMA Under Olalekan Bakare-Oki – Adebayo Taofiq

    April 20, 2026
  • Sports

    FirstBank Partners Eko Hotels & KEY Academy for ChessMasters 2026 Tournament

    April 9, 2026

    FirstBank Sponsors Samuel Okwaraji U-16 Football Championship 2026, Promotes Education Through School Sports

    April 2, 2026

    Hidden Workforce of 2026 Access Bank Lagos City Marathon

    February 20, 2026

    15th Biennial Nigeria Police Games “ BIPOGA Asaba 2026”: Delta State Command Notifies Public Of Shooting Event Schedule

    February 15, 2026

    Access Bank Lagos City Marathon Returns Feb 14, Powering Culture, Community ,Global Connections

    February 12, 2026
  • More
    • Environment
    • Security
    • Crime
    • Accident
    • Education
    • Banking
    • Religion
    • Health
  • About Us
Insight Global NewsInsight Global News
Home » FirstBank’s ₦1 Trillion Digital Loan Disbursement Milestone, New Era Of Inclusive Lending In Nigeria
Finance

FirstBank’s ₦1 Trillion Digital Loan Disbursement Milestone, New Era Of Inclusive Lending In Nigeria

Oluwatoyin MathnuelBy Oluwatoyin MathnuelAugust 30, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

For decades, Nigeria’s credit system posed significant challenges for small businesses and low-income earners, who often struggled to qualify for loans. Traditional banks demanded collaterals, guarantors, and endless paperwork, effectively shutting out a large portion of the population working in the informal economy. FirstBank’s digital lending model flipped the script. With the launch of its digital lending model, the bank eliminated collateral requirements and slashed approval times from weeks to under five minutes. Loans now flow through multiple channels including *894# (the Bank’s USSD service), FirstMobile, LitApp, and the FirstMonie agent network, reaching market traders, civil servants, rural farmers and everyday individuals.

When FirstBank disbursed its first instant digital loan in August 2019, the transaction seemed like a bold experiment in tech-driven finance. Today, just six years later, the 131-year-old financial institution has announced cumulative disbursements of over N1 trillion in digital loans, a milestone that redefines the scale of retail digital lending in Nigeria’s financial services industry. This achievement reflects a deep shift in the way and manner Nigerians (salary earners, small and medium scale entrepreneurs, and the financially excluded) access loans. Credit, once a privilege for the wealthy or formally employed, is now a tap away for millions of Nigerians. FirstBank is helping people to grow their businesses, seize opportunities, and stay afloat in challenging times.

The numbers tell a compelling story: over 1.5 million unique borrowers have accessed loans through FirstBank’s digital platforms. For a banking system historically constrained by bureaucracy, and rigid risk models, the existence of collateral-free, instant digital loans comes as a relief. FirstBank has tapped into an unmet demand that traditional lending channels have struggled to capture. Its digital lending ecosystem, designed with Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, is tailored to assess high-risk segments that conventional credit scoring often overlooks.

In Nigeria, where over 40 percent of the adult population are still underbanked or completely unbanked, FirstBank is reshaping what inclusion looks like. The issue is not that Nigerians lack ambition or the ability to repay loans; it is that traditional banking systems have long struggled to assess their creditworthiness. Legacy models simply could not capture the financial realities of people outside the formal economy.

FirstBank is rewriting that narrative. Through a range of digital loan products (FirstAdvance for salary earners, FirstCredit for individuals without formal employment, and Agent Credit for micro-businesses operating within the FirstMonie Agent network), the bank is showing how financial inclusion can be scaled with smart, data-driven tools. These products are tailored to meet people where they are, using technology to bridge gaps that paperwork once made impassable.

FirstBank’s digital lending strategy deeply aligns with Nigeria’s broader financial inclusion goals. The 2023 EFInA Survey Report on Access to Financial Services in Nigeria (A2F) shows that 64 percent of the Nigerian population is now formally included in the financial system. Much of this progress is thanks to the increased adoption of mobile money and digital financial services, which are making banking accessible even in the most remote corners of the country.

The implications for micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) are profound. According to the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN), MSMEs contribute nearly 50 percent to the country’s GDP and employ over 80 percent of the labour force, yet access to formal credit remains one of their greatest constraints. Through Agent Credit, FirstBank empowers small traders, artisans, and shopkeepers, many in areas far from any bank branch, with quick, affordable capital. This redistribution of financial access fosters economic participation and resilience at the grassroots.

The significance of this model extends beyond Nigeria. Across Africa, where an estimated 350 million adults lack access to formal financial services, FirstBank’s model offers a blueprint. African banks can leverage existing mobile adoption, behavioural data, and agent networks to build credit ecosystems suited to local realities, utilising digital lending as a bridge between exclusion and empowerment. It is proof that banks can be more than just gatekeepers; they can be catalysts for inclusive growth.

Industry analysts see FirstBank’s digital lending milestone as part of a broader evolution in Nigeria’s digital economy. In the past decade, the proliferation of mobile banking and agent banking has pushed the boundaries of accessibility. Yet, access to credit has remained a stubborn bottleneck. While savings and payment platforms grew quickly, lending stayed cautious. Banks were held back by the risk of defaults, weak identification systems, and limited credit histories. FirstBank is showing how that equation can be changed. By using data aggregation, alternative credit scoring models, and digital channels, the bank is unlocking new ways to assess risk and extend credit more confidently.

However, scaling digital credit also raises questions about sustainability and customer protection. In Kenya, for example, the rapid growth of digital loans over the past decade led to concerns about over-indebtedness, data privacy, and predatory lending practices by unregulated operators. Nigeria’s regulatory environment will need to balance innovation with safeguards, ensuring that customers are included and protected. FirstBank is ahead on this, leveraging AI not only for loan approvals but also for proactive risk management, ensuring defaults are minimised and repayment behaviour is nurtured responsibly.

Another dimension is the competitive landscape. Many fintech lenders have built reputations on offering fast, collateral-free loans. Yet, their model has often been characterised by exploitative interest rates and coercive repayment tactics, and regulatory headwinds. FirstBank, with its balance sheet strength, established reputation, and nationwide presence, has a competitive edge in blending the agility and flexibility of fintech with the resilience of traditional. With over N1 trillion digital loans successfully processed, the bank demonstrates the ability to serve Nigerians with speed while providing a level of institutional trust many customers still value.

The milestone also reflects a cultural shift in how Nigerians relate to their banks. For decades, traditional banks were perceived as conservative institutions, more interested in corporate customers than on individuals struggling with school fees, rent, or working capital for their shops. By embedding loan access into its digital channels and the FirstMonie Agent network, FirstBank has repositioned itself as a partner in everyday life. Whether customers use smartphones or basic feature phones, they now have equal access to credit and are no longer sidelined by technology gaps or administrative hurdles.

From an economic perspective, the ripple effects of FirstBank’s digital lending ecosystem are far-reaching. Beyond consumption smoothing for households, instant digital loans catalyse economic activity in local markets. Traders can restock quickly, farmers can purchase farm inputs when they are needed, and artisans are able to meet unexpected orders. When aggregated, these micro-impacts contribute to broader productivity and growth, helping to stabilise the informal economy that forms the lifeblood of local commerce.

As FirstBank marks this landmark achievement, it also confronts the responsibility that comes with scale. Digital lending at this magnitude is not merely a product line; it is a public utility shaping how millions experience financial security. Sustaining this momentum will require continuous innovation and a firm focus on customer empowerment, values that are deeply ingrained in the bank’s DNA.

Oluwatoyin Mathnuel

Related Posts

CITAB Responds to New Tax Laws, Calls for Direct Reinvestment in Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities

January 4, 2026

2026: Ejigbadero Presents “Budget of Progress, Sustainability “

December 20, 2025

Fidelity Bank to Host Virtual Masterclass on New Tax Law

December 11, 2025

Comments are closed.

Recent Posts

  • Four Times Primate Ayodele Warned About Resurfacing Of Covid-19 In Nigeria (VIDEOS)
  • Fidelity Bank Strengthens SME Support with High Impact Masterclasses on Pricing, Digital Growth , Global Expansion
  • Providus Bank Expands Footprint with Ekiti Branch, Reaffirms Capital Strength
  • Sterling Bank, One Foundation, Sunbeth, Partners Strengthen Climate Action With Nationwide Cleanup, Beach Adoption
  • Sterling, Partners Drive Nationwide Cleanup ovement

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
© 2026 All Rights Reserved. Insight Global News. Designed by DeedsTech.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.