NCC Lists Subscribers Eligible for Compensation Over Poor Network
The Nigerian Communications Commission has clarified which subscribers qualify for compensation under its new directive requiring telecom operators to make up for poor network service, with...
The Nigerian Communications Commission has clarified which subscribers qualify for compensation under its new directive requiring telecom operators to make up for poor network service, with implementation set to begin in April 2026.
The details were outlined in a newly released FAQ, offering fresh insight into how the policy will work and who stands to benefit.
Who Qualifies for NCC Compensation?
According to the Commission, subscribers will be eligible if:
They experienced poor network service in a specific Local Government Area
They carried out at least one revenue-generating activity (calls, SMS, or data usage) during the affected period
The NCC noted that the policy covers both individual and corporate customers.
Compensation Will Be Automatic
The regulator emphasized that subscribers do not need to apply:
Telecom operators are required to identify affected users automatically
Compensation will be issued directly, typically via airtime or data credits
However, only service failures that fall below the Commission’s Quality of Service (QoS) thresholds will qualify.
Brief or quickly resolved disruptions may not be eligible
Only verified and measurable service lapses will count
Telcos Under Watch as Policy Takes Effect
The directive applies to Mobile Network Operators (MNOs), including:
MTN Nigeria
Airtel Nigeria
Globacom
9mobile
The NCC did not disclose which operators failed to meet the required service benchmarks.
It also clarified that Internet Service Providers (ISPs) already operate under a separate compensation framework.
A Shift Toward Consumer Protection
The policy marks a significant shift in how the NCC handles poor service quality.
Previously, the regulator imposed fines on telecom operators for failing QoS standards, with little direct benefit to subscribers. Now, the focus is on:
Direct compensation to affected users
Stronger accountability for operators
Improved service delivery across networks
According to the Commission, poor network quality impacts economic productivity, communication, and digital access, making consumer protection a priority.
Industry Challenges Still Persist
Despite ongoing investments by telecom operators, network performance continues to face challenges—particularly frequent fibre cuts, which the NCC says average about 1,100 incidents weekly.
These disruptions remain a major factor behind service degradation nationwide.
With the policy now in effect:
Eligible users will begin receiving automatic compensation
Telecom operators face increased pressure to meet QoS standards
Consumers gain a more direct safety net against poor service
For many Nigerians, this signals a long-awaited move toward fairer and more responsive telecom regulation.



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