Nigeria processed approximately $92.1 billion in cryptocurrency on-chain value; transactions received between July 2024 and June 2025. This figure comes primarily from analyses by PwC Nigeria in their 2026 Economic Outlook report and is echoed in Chainalysis data on Sub-Saharan Africa’s crypto flows.
Nigeria accounted for the lion’s share of the region’s roughly $205 billion total during that period—nearly triple South Africa’s volume and more than the combined totals of several other major African economies like Ethiopia, Kenya, and Ghana. Much of this volume involves USDT and other stablecoins, used as a practical hedge against naira volatility, inflation, and limited access to hard currency.
When the naira was devalued in early 2025, monthly crypto volumes in Nigeria spiked as high as $25 billion in one month. A large portion comes from everyday use—remittances, freelance payments, cross-border transfers, and peer-to-peer commerce—rather than pure speculation. Young, tech-savvy users like students, freelancers, professionals drive a lot of it, with many preferring stablecoins over the naira for payments.
Nigeria has consistently ranked among the top countries globally for grassroots crypto adoption often #2 or high single digits in Chainalysis indices, thanks to its large youth population, mobile-first culture, and economic pressures. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and SEC have shifted from earlier restrictions toward more structured oversight, including pilots for virtual asset regulation and plans to tie larger transactions to National ID (NIN) and Tax ID (TIN) for compliance and tax purposes.
This reflects recognition of crypto’s scale while aiming to reduce risks like money laundering. This isn’t just hype—it’s real economic behavior filling gaps left by traditional finance. Nigeria’s crypto scene shows how decentralized tools can become essential infrastructure in high-inflation, FX-constrained environments.
The $92.1 billion in crypto on-chain value received in Nigeria has produced wide-ranging impacts across the economy, society, finance, and policy. This scale—driven largely by stablecoins like USDT—reflects grassroots adaptation to structural challenges like naira volatility, high inflation, FX restrictions, and limited banking access.
Crypto especially P2P and stablecoins offers faster, cheaper alternatives to traditional channels. Many Nigerians, including freelancers, students, and diaspora families, use it for instant transfers, bypassing high fees and delays from banks or services like Western Union. This supports household incomes and small businesses in a country with significant remittance inflows.
The sector fuels opportunities for young, tech-savvy users—traders, developers, P2P facilitators, and fintech startups. It contributes to broader digital economy growth and has potential positive links to GDP via increased transaction volumes and innovation in payments and commerce. Enables unbanked or underbanked populations via mobile wallets to participate in global finance without traditional bank accounts.
Higher crypto adoption correlates with naira depreciation in some analyses, partly due to capital outflows (users converting naira to stablecoins/USD equivalents) and reduced demand for local currency. This can complicate monetary policy and FX management. Shifts from bank deposits to crypto wallets can reduce local liquidity and create outflow risks to offshore stablecoin reserves.
While utility-focused, speculative elements add to economic uncertainty in an already pressured environment. PwC and Chainalysis note that crypto has become essential infrastructure filling gaps in traditional finance, contributing to Sub-Saharan Africa’s $205B regional total with Nigeria dominant.
Nigeria’s large young population (tech-savvy, mobile-first) powers much of the volume. This fosters digital skills, innovation, and alternative income streams amid high youth unemployment. Used for peer-to-peer commerce, payments, and savings—making it a normalized tool rather than just investment.
Exposure to scams, fraud, and volatility disproportionately affects retail users with limited financial literacy. Illicit activities though not the majority remain a concern in unregulated segments. Earlier CBN restrictions pushed activity underground to P2P. By 2025–2026, the government moved toward oversight via the Investments and Securities Act (ISA) 2025, classifying digital assets as securities under SEC and new tax rules.
Crypto profits now treated as income up to 25% tax rather than 10% capital gains. Transactions increasingly linked to NIN (National ID) and TIN (Tax ID) for compliance. This aims to boost revenue, improve traceability, and align with ambitions like a $1 trillion economy by 2030. Creation of the Virtual Asset Regulatory Council (VARC) and joint CBN/SEC/VARA oversight. Banks can now work with licensed VASPs.
SEC licensing requirements and AML pilots are in play. PwC highlights risks around enforcement capacity, compliance burdens especially for smaller players, licensing delays, capital flow management, and market surveillance. Poor coordination could drive activity to informal and offshore channels. Efforts also target reducing money laundering risks and exiting FATF gray-list concerns.
PwC projects continued leadership in Sub-Saharan Africa’s crypto market, sustained by ongoing FX and inflation pressures and stablecoin demand, provided regulation brings clarity without stifling innovation. Benefits include deeper digital economy integration, while risks center on macroeconomic stability, investor protection, and illicit finance.
In Lagos and across Nigeria, this $92B+ phenomenon demonstrates bottom-up resilience: crypto isn’t just speculation—it’s practical infrastructure for millions navigating economic headwinds. However, sustainable growth depends on effective implementation of the new rules to formalize gains while mitigating downsides.







