Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has rolled out a new ₦250,000 application fee for companies seeking temporary approval to test innovative telecom services, aiming to fast-track sector modernisation while safeguarding consumers.

NCC
The fee targets the newly launched Interim Service Authorisation (ISA), a short-term licence enabling telecom operators, startups, and tech firms to trial novel offerings in live markets before full commercial rollout. Contained in NCC’s freshly published General Authorisation Framework, the charge covers administrative processing, with successful applicants potentially facing extra costs for spectrum or numbering resources.
Under the rules, firms pay the ₦250,000 upfront upon application. Trials run for an initial three months, renewable once up to six months total, capped at 10,000 users and restricted geographically. Operators must prove their service is genuinely new, detail regulatory hurdles, outline consumer safeguards, and submit monthly reports, all while upholding data protection, security, and rights obligations.
NCC Executive Vice-Chairman Aminu Maida, who previewed the draft in July, said exploding tech advances had outstripped old licensing models, necessitating reform to foster innovation without skimping on public safeguards. The ISA lets providers gauge technical viability, market appetite, and risks, while regulators scrutinise quality and impact pre-scale-up.
“This framework strikes a balance—unleashing experimentation in spectrum sharing, Open RAN, and alternative connectivity, minus the pitfalls of unchecked rollouts,” an NCC statement noted. Participation offers no automatic path to full licences; commercial bids hinge on fresh evaluations and category fits.
Industry players hailed the move as a risk-reducer for unproven ideas, potentially slashing flop costs in Nigeria’s cut-throat telecom arena. With participation limited and monitoring rigorous, the NCC bets on controlled pilots to propel breakthroughs, cementing Africa’s giant as a digital vanguard.
As operators eye 5G-plus frontiers, the ISA arrives amid investor clamour for agile rules, positioning Nigeria to harvest homegrown tech leaps without consumer blowback.
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