For years, Nigeria’s place on the FATF grey list has been a talking point in global finance circles, a reminder of the work still needed to strengthen the country’s financial integrity systems.
But in October 2025, that story changed.
After months of review, reform, and collaboration across regulators, financial institutions, and international partners, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) officially announced Nigeria’s removal from its “grey list.”
For a country that anchors West Africa’s economy with millions of businesses transacting daily across borders, this milestone goes far beyond compliance. It’s a signal that Nigeria is ready to stand tall on the global financial stage.
A Journey of Reform and Resilience
Getting off the grey list wasn’t an overnight success story. It was the product of years of effort tightening supervision, enhancing transparency, and improving how financial crimes are detected and reported.
Behind every policy change were countless people compliance officers, bankers, fintech teams, and regulators all working to build a system that global partners can trust.
And now, that effort is paying off.
The FATF’s decision doesn’t just clear Nigeria’s name, it clears the path for renewed investor confidence, better cross-border partnerships, and stronger integration with global markets.
What This Means for Cross-Border Payments
At Yala, we see this as more than a regulatory milestone, it’s a signal of trust restored.
For years, businesses sending or receiving money through Nigerian corridors have faced additional layers of scrutiny. Every transaction had to work harder to prove its legitimacy.
Now, with Nigeria’s removal from the grey list, cross-border payment corridors become stronger, more transparent, and more resilient. It’s an opportunity to rebuild global confidence and to show that financial progress and integrity can go hand in hand.
“Nigeria’s removal from the FATF grey list marks a significant milestone in strengthening the country’s financial integrity framework. At Yala, we view this as a positive signal for the transparency and resilience of cross-border payment corridors involving Nigeria.
While we welcome this development, our commitment to maintaining the highest global compliance standards remains unwavering as we continue to facilitate safe, transparent, and efficient transactions for our clients worldwide.”
— The Compliance Desk, Yala Global Technologies Inc.
Progress Doesn’t Stop Here
For Nigeria, this is just the beginning of a new chapter.
Getting off the list shows what’s possible; staying off it will depend on continued discipline, transparency, and cooperation.
For financial institutions and Fintechs like Yala, this moment serves as both a win and a responsibility, a reminder that global trust is earned every single day, in every single transaction.
That’s why Yala continues to build compliance at the core, integrating global KYC/AML standards, continuous risk monitoring, and proactive oversight into every layer of our technology. Because we know that trust isn’t built by systems alone it’s built by people, values, and consistency.
Looking Ahead
Nigeria’s step out of the grey is more than a headline, it’s a story of progress, partnership, and possibility. It tells the world that African markets are not just catching up but are setting new standards in financial responsibility and innovation.
And as Nigeria continues to deepen its integration into the global economy, Yala stands ready empowering businesses to send, receive, and manage money across borders safely, transparently, and confidently.
