Interest Rate: Banking Sector Maximum Lending Rate Drops to 34.78%
Kayode Tokede
Following the marginal reduction of the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the banking sector average maximum lending rate depreciated to 34.78 per cent in May 2026 from 35.17per cent in April 2026.
Maximum lending rate refers to the highest permissible interest rate that lenders can charge borrowers. The rate is crucial for ensuring fair lending practices and protecting borrowers from excessive interest rates.
This is the first time the average maximum lending rate declined since the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the CBN reduced interest rate to 26.50 per cent in late February 2026 from 27 per cent.
The committee had cited sustained disinflation, naira appreciation, and an improved external position for its rate cut.
According to the CBN’s “Money Market Indicators” the average maximum lending rate that opened January 2026 at 32.68 per cent moved to 35.17per cent in February 2026 at a time interest rate was reduced to 26.50 per cent.
The CBN data revealed that the average maximum lending rate remained flat at 35.17 per cent between February and April 2026 amid 26.50 per cent interest rate.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) had responded to unmoved average average maximum lending rate between February and April 2026, expressing that Nigerian banks raise lending rates rapidly when monetary policy is tightened but are slower to reduce borrowing costs or increase returns to savers.
“Interest rate transmission displays a clear “rockets-and-feathers” pattern, with borrowing rates adjusting upward rapidly during tightening cycles but declining only gradually when policy is eased,” IMF said
“When the CBN tightens, wholesale and lending rates respond strongly and more than proportionally: a 100 basis-point MPR hike raises T-bill and lending rates by roughly 175–180 basis points on impact, whereas a comparable cut lowers them by only about 25–30 basis points.
“This asymmetry – statistically significant – implies that banks transmit tightening rapidly and even amplify it but adjust much more slowly during easing cycles. By contrast, while the interbank rate responds symmetrically (around 0.6 in both directions) and deposit rates show little response either way (around 0.12), both are not significant,” the report by IMF explained.
In 2025, the maximum lending rate was 29.32 per cent, when the MPC voted to retain the MPR at 27.00 per cent from 27.50 per cent.
The average maximum lending rate has sparked concerns regarding the potential impact on the cost of credit for businesses already facing economic hardships due to foreign exchange unification and fuel subsidy removal by the Federal Government.
CBN data revealed that the average maximum lending rate rose to 29.79 per cent in January 2025 from 29.71 per cent in December 2024 when MPC members of CBN voted to retain MPR to 27.50 per cent.
The banking sector lending rate in Nigeria averaged 14.17 per cent from 1961 until 2024, reaching an all-time high of 37.80 per cent in September of 1993 and a record low of six per cent in April of 1975. In 2020, the average maximum lending rate reached a peak of 30.73 per cent when the MPR rate stood at 13.5per cent
CBN numbers also revealed that the average prime lending rate increased to 19.10 per cent in May 2026 from 18.87per cent in April 2026.
The prime lending rate indicates the possible rate offered to the most creditworthy customers by Nigerian banks.
So far this year, the average prime lending rate has reached 19.54 per cent, the highest in over 10 years.
Nigeria’s average prime lending rate reached an all-time high of 19.66 per cent in November 2009 and a record low of 11.13per cent in March 2021. The steady increase in interest rate reflected in the average prime lending rate last year as the CBN intensified its effort to tackle inflation rate and stabilize the local currency at the foreign exchange market.
Experts have predicted a further increase in the average maximum lending and primer lending rate despite a stable foreign exchange market and ease in inflation figure.
This unprecedented move has not only set the interest rate at its highest level to date but also reflects the CBN’s determined effort to address the persistent pressure on foreign exchange and inflation.
