Business Permits and Licences in Nigeria: The Complete Guide by Sector (2026)
•Updated March 2026
•15 min read
•Comprehensive pillar guide — bookmarked by 1,000+ Nigerian business owners
One of the most common and costly mistakes Nigerian entrepreneurs make is assuming that registering a company with the CAC is all that stands between them and operating a business. It is not. CAC registration establishes your business. Regulatory permits and licences allow it to operate.
Nigeria has over 30 sector-specific regulatory bodies, each with the power to issue licences, conduct inspections, seize assets, impose fines, and shut down operations. Depending on your industry, you may need approvals from two, three, or more of these bodies before you can legally begin operations.
This is Nigeria’s most comprehensive guide to business permits and licences — organised by sector, written in plain English, and updated for 2026. Use it to identify exactly which permits apply to your business, which regulator issues them, and what you need to do next.
What business permits and licences does every business in Nigeria need?
Every business in Nigeria — regardless of sector or size — requires three universal compliance foundations: CAC registration (company or business name registration with the Corporate Affairs Commission), a Tax Identification Number (TIN) from the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS, formerly FIRS), and VAT registration if annual turnover exceeds ₦100 million. Beyond these, each business sector has specific regulatory permits from the relevant sector regulator — which this guide covers comprehensively by industry.
The 3 Universal Compliance Requirements for Every Nigerian Business
Before any sector-specific permit — every Nigerian business, without exception, must have these three foundations in place:
| Requirement | Regulator | What It Does | Where to Apply |
|---|---|---|---|
| CAC Registration | Corporate Affairs Commission | Gives your business legal existence — required before any other permit application | CAC portal: cacregistration.gov.ng or through an accredited agent like EBC Consults |
| Tax Identification Number (TIN) | Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) | Your business’s tax identity — required for all government transactions, bank accounts, and permit applications | NRS portal: taxpromax.gov.ng — auto-generated upon CAC registration since 2020 |
| VAT Registration | Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) | Mandatory if annual turnover exceeds ₦100 million — allows you to charge and remit 7.5% VAT | NRS TaxPro-Max portal — register within 6 months of reaching the ₦100m threshold |
| Note: As of 2026, the FIRS has been renamed the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) under the Nigeria Revenue Service Establishment Act. TIN numbers and TaxPro-Max accounts remain valid — no migration required. | |||
In Nigeria, these two terms mean very different things. A Business Permit (issued by the Federal Ministry of Interior) is specifically required by wholly foreign-owned companies or joint ventures — it authorises foreigners to conduct business in Nigeria, and requires a minimum share capital of ₦100 million. Local Nigerian-owned businesses do not need a Business Permit. A business licence is a sector-specific regulatory approval from the relevant regulator — such as NAFDAC for food manufacturers or the CBN for banks. Every regulated business needs a licence; only foreign-owned businesses need a Business Permit.
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Business Permits and Licences by Sector — The Master Guide
Nigeria’s regulatory landscape is organised by sector. Find your industry below — each section tells you the regulator, the specific licence or permit required, and links to the detailed guide where available.
The Regulatory Compliance Hierarchy in Nigeria
Nigerian regulatory compliance operates at three levels — federal, state, and local government. Most businesses need approvals at more than one level. Understanding this hierarchy prevents the common mistake of obtaining a federal licence while overlooking required state or local approvals:
| Level | Who Issues It | Applies To | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal | Federal regulatory bodies — NAFDAC, CBN, NCC, SEC, NUPRC, NERC, etc. | Nationwide operations — licence is valid across all 36 states and FCT | NAFDAC product registration, CBN banking licence, NCC operating licence |
| State | State government ministries and agencies | Operations within a specific state — each state may have different requirements | Lagos LASBCA building permit, Rivers State environmental permit, Abuja FCDA development permit |
| Local Government | Local Government Authority (LGA) | Physical business premises within an LGA jurisdiction | Business premises permit, signage/advertisement permit, market stall allocation |
| Key point: A federal NAFDAC registration does not exempt you from Lagos State health inspections. A CBN licence does not replace your LGA business premises permit. All three levels may apply simultaneously. | |||
Key Nigerian Regulatory Bodies — Quick Reference
| Regulator | Full Name | Sectors Covered | Website |
|---|---|---|---|
| NAFDAC | National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control | Food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, water, chemicals | nafdac.gov.ng |
| CBN | Central Bank of Nigeria | Banking, fintech, payment systems, foreign exchange | cbn.gov.ng |
| SEC | Securities and Exchange Commission | Capital markets, investments, collective investment schemes | sec.gov.ng |
| NCC | Nigerian Communications Commission | Telecoms, internet services, cable TV, spectrum management | ncc.gov.ng |
| NUPRC | Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission | Oil and gas upstream operations (formerly DPR upstream functions) | nuprc.gov.ng |
| NMDPRA | Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority | Petroleum midstream and downstream, LPG, gas pipelines | nmdpra.gov.ng |
| NERC | Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission | Electricity generation, transmission, distribution, trading | nerc.gov.ng |
| NAICOM | National Insurance Commission | Insurance companies, reinsurance, insurance brokers | naicom.gov.ng |
| NESREA | National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency | Environmental compliance — manufacturing, construction, waste | nesrea.gov.ng |
| FCCPC | Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission | Consumer rights, unfair trade practices, merger clearances | fccpc.gov.ng |
| SON | Standards Organisation of Nigeria | Product standards certification for manufactured goods | son.gov.ng |
| NIPO | Nigerian Industrial Property Office | Trademarks, patents, industrial designs | iponigeria.com |
How Long Does It Take to Get Business Permits in Nigeria?
Processing times vary enormously by regulator and permit type. Here is a realistic guide to timelines for the most common permits:
| Permit / Licence | Regulator | Official Timeline | Realistic Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| NAFDAC product registration (food) | NAFDAC | 90 days | 6–12 months |
| NAFDAC product registration (drugs) | NAFDAC | 120 days | 9–18 months |
| CBN microfinance bank licence | CBN | Not published | 12–24 months |
| CBN payment service provider (PSP) licence | CBN | Not published | 6–18 months |
| NCC operating licence (ISP) | NCC | Varies by category | 4–12 weeks (simple) to months (complex) |
| SEC registration (capital market operator) | SEC | 30 working days | 2–6 months |
| SON product certification | SON | Not published | 3–6 months |
| NESREA environmental impact assessment | NESREA | Not published | 3–9 months |
| Business Permit (foreign companies) | Ministry of Interior | Not published | 4–8 weeks (with complete documents) |
| Having complete, correct documentation is the single biggest factor in reducing processing time across all Nigerian regulatory bodies. | |||
The Consequences of Non-Compliance in Nigeria
Many Nigerian businesses treat regulatory compliance as an optional overhead. The consequences of non-compliance tell a different story:
- NAFDAC: Products can be seized and destroyed without compensation. Businesses can be sealed. Individuals can be prosecuted and imprisoned under the NAFDAC Act.
- CBN: Financial institutions operating without a licence face revocation of any existing approvals, fines, and prosecution under BOFIA 2020. The CBN publishes the names of unlicensed operators publicly.
- NCC: Unlicensed telecoms operators face fines of up to ₦500,000 per day of non-compliance and equipment seizure under the Nigerian Communications Act.
- LASBCA (Lagos): Over 1,000 buildings were sealed in Lagos in a single year for construction permit violations — a pattern repeated annually across major Nigerian cities.
- FCCPC: Can impose fines of up to 10% of annual turnover for consumer protection violations and can prohibit specific business practices.
- NRS (Tax): Tax non-compliance carries penalties of ₦100,000 for the first month of default and ₦50,000 per subsequent month under the Nigeria Tax Act 2025, plus criminal prosecution for deliberate evasion.
Obtaining a permit or licence is not a one-time event. Most Nigerian regulatory licences have annual renewal requirements, periodic inspection obligations, reporting duties, and variation requirements when your business changes. A licence that is not actively maintained can become invalid — and an invalid licence carries the same penalties as never having had one.
Detailed Guides — Navigate to Your Sector
EBC Consults Regulatory Permits & Licences Guide Series
Frequently Asked Questions — Business Permits & Licences Nigeria
Navigate Nigeria’s regulatory landscape with EBC Consults
Whether you need NAFDAC registration, a CBN licence, SON certification, or a full multi-regulator compliance strategy — EBC Consults has the expertise to guide your business through Nigeria’s regulatory requirements efficiently, correctly, and without surprises. We are Nigeria’s full-service business compliance consultancy.
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