Subscribe

Stay informed

Get the day's top headlines delivered to your inbox every morning.

By subscribing, you agree to our Privacy Policy

the Nation

Truth in Every Story

twitterfacebookinstagramyoutube

News

  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • World

Features

  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Video

Company

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Careers
  • Advertise

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility

© 2026 the Nation. All rights reserved.

SitemapRSS Feed
Business

Group decries exclusion of N500,000 earners from mortgage market

The Chief Executive Officer, Mortgage Banking Association of Nigeria, Adedeji Ajadi, has warned that Nigerians earning below N500, 000 per month are effectively excluded from home ownership under the current

Share this article
February 25, 2026byThe Nation
4 min read

The Chief Executive Officer, Mortgage Banking Association of Nigeria, Adedeji Ajadi, has warned that Nigerians earning below N500, 000 per month are effectively excluded from home ownership under the current mortgage structure, deepening the Nigeria mortgage affordability crisis.

 Ajadi described the country’s mortgage penetration rate which is currently below one per cent as alarmingly low, particularly in the face of a housing deficit estimated at over 28 million units.

He identified limited access to formal financial systems as a primary obstacle. He lamented that a large proportion of Nigerians operate within the informal economy and cannot meet documentation requirements such as verifiable income records and formal employment contracts.

High interest rates, currently ranging between 18 and 27 per cent, further compound affordability constraints. At these levels, mortgage repayments on even modest housing units often exceed 40 per cent of a borrower’s monthly income, breaching the internationally accepted affordability threshold he stated.

In a statement Ajadi said legal and administrative bottlenecks also weaken the system as inefficient land titling processes, prolonged foreclosure procedures, and fragmented property records discourage lenders and inflate risk premiums. According to him, many Nigerians resort to incremental self-construction or informal housing arrangements instead of formal mortgage financing.

Ajadi maintained that reducing mortgage rates requires a coordinated, multi-layered strategy while strengthening long-term funding access through refinancing institutions such as the Nigeria Mortgage Refinance Company to provide liquidity to primary lenders.

He disclosed that government-backed interventions including subsidised financing programmes and targeted housing funds can also reduce borrowing costs for low- and middle-income earners.  He lamented that persistent inflation, which exceeded 33 per cent in 2024, alongside exchange rate volatility, continues to increase funding costs and erode household purchasing power.

READ ALSO: Candidates not required to remove Hijab during registration – JAMB clarifies

Without stable inflation and currency conditions, lenders will continue pricing mortgages at elevated levels to offset risk exposure, the statement said.

According to him with roughly 85 per cent of Nigeria’s workforce operating in the informal sector, traditional salary-based mortgage models remain exclusionary.

The MBAN chief advocated for alternative credit scoring frameworks that incorporate rent payment history, utility bills, mobile wallet transactions and remittance inflows to assess borrower credibility. Flexible repayment models including income-linked instalments, step-up mortgage structures and hybrid rent-to-own schemes could improve access for young professionals and informal earners with variable income streams.

 Furthermore he observed that micro-mortgages and cooperative-backed housing guarantees were also identified as scalable options to widen participation in housing finance.

He said: “Despite diaspora remittances surpassing $20 billion in 2023, mortgage-linked investments remain limited due to concerns over fraud, weak land administration systems and limited transparency. To unlock diaspora capital, he recommended the development of standardised mortgage pools, credit enhancement mechanisms and internationally rated mortgage-backed securities. Transparent digital platforms, enforceable legal frameworks and credible dispute resolution mechanisms would be necessary to build investor confidence”.

Ajadi highlighted the transformative potential of digitised land registries and blockchain-based title systems.

In his recommendations he asked for tamper-proof property records, accelerate verification processes and enhance lender confidence.

Also, he called for streamlined land registration and clearer ownership documentation that would expand the pool of mortgage-eligible properties, strengthen collateral security and reduce default risks.

Weak consumer protection frameworks in Nigeria’s housing finance market expose borrowers to opaque pricing structures, hidden fees and exploitative clauses.  There is a need for standardised mortgage contracts, mandatory annual percentage rate disclosures and the establishment of a dedicated mortgage ombudsman to resolve disputes.

He stressed that improved regulatory safeguards would restore trust and attract both domestic and institutional investors.

Under current conditions, Ajadi maintained that home ownership remains largely unrealistic for Nigerians earning below N500,000 monthly. Without structural reforms addressing funding costs, land administration, legal enforcement and macroeconomic volatility, the Nigeria mortgage affordability crisis will persist.

However, with coordinated policy reforms, digital innovation and targeted subsidy frameworks, the mortgage sector could evolve into a more inclusive and sustainable pillar of Nigeria’s housing ecosystem, he added.

Share this article
The Nation

Related Articles

Group unveils app to empower drivers, investors

Group unveils app to empower drivers, investors

Ijeawele Group, a leading Nigerian integrated lifestyle and mobility ecosystem, has launched its technology-driven hire-purchase driver app. The app launch took place at its 1st Annual General Meeting (AGM) which

Yesterday at 10:54 PM
Advisory council screens Oyo governorship aspirants

Advisory council screens Oyo governorship aspirants

The Oyo State Governor’s Advisory Council has completed the screening and stakeholder engagement exercise ordered by Governor Seyi Makinde. The exercise, led by the Council chairman Chief Bolaji Ayorinde (SAN),

Yesterday at 10:47 PM
Eruwa residents raise alarm over rising attacks on farmers

Eruwa residents raise alarm over rising attacks on farmers

…seek urgent security intervention Residents of Eruwa in Oyo State have raised concerns over what they described as a surge in violent attacks on farmers and rural settlements, urging government

Yesterday at 8:09 PM
Ending malaria in Nigeria: Why local manufacturing is now the decisive front

Ending malaria in Nigeria: Why local manufacturing is now the decisive front

Malaria no longer persists for lack of solutions—it endures because the systems required to deliver those solutions remain fragile, uneven, and too often externally dependent. As World Malaria Day 2026

Yesterday at 8:08 PM