With less than four months remaining before the July 31, 2026 deadline for the ongoing recapitalisation exercise in Nigeria’s insurance industry, fresh projections suggest a significant wave of capital inflows is imminent as operators move to comply with stricter regulatory thresholds.
Agusto & Co. Limited estimates that insurers will inject approximately ₦270 billion into the sector ahead of the deadline, underscoring the scale of financial adjustments required under the current reform programme.
The projection forms part of the firm’s 2026 insurance industry report, which provides an extensive assessment of the sector’s performance in 2025 while outlining near-term expectations amid sweeping regulatory changes introduced through the Nigerian Insurance Industry Reform Act (NIIRA) 2025.
According to the report, the bulk of the anticipated capital injection will come from non-life insurers, which are expected to account for about 63 percent of the total. This, the agency notes, reflects the prevalence of undercapitalised players within that segment. In contrast, life insurers are projected to contribute a relatively modest 13 percent, while composite insurers will make up the remaining 24 percent.
Reviewing industry performance, Agusto & Co. observed that despite persistent macroeconomic pressures faced by businesses and households in the financial year ended December 31, 2025, the insurance sector delivered a notably strong performance. Estimated insurance revenue rose by 40.8 percent to ₦1.9 trillion, while the industry’s investment portfolio continued to expand, pushing total assets closer to the ₦5 trillion mark.
The report attributes this growth to a combination of factors, including more aggressive business generation strategies, a firmer regulatory stance by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), and improved efficiency in investment management across the industry.
Agusto & Co. further highlighted that 2025 marked a turning point for the sector’s regulatory architecture with the enactment of NIIRA 2025, described as the most comprehensive overhaul of the industry’s legal and supervisory framework in recent years. The legislation significantly strengthens NAICOM’s oversight capabilities, granting it enhanced authority to revoke licences of non-compliant operators and revise penalties in line with current economic realities.
In addition, the Act expands the scope of compulsory insurance policies from six to eleven, a move aimed at deepening insurance penetration as Nigeria positions its economy for long-term expansion.
A key pillar of the reform is the upward revision of minimum capital requirements across insurance segments. Under the implementation guidelines, net admissible assets have been adopted as the benchmark for assessing compliance with the new capital thresholds.
Against this backdrop, Agusto & Co. maintains that the anticipated ₦270 billion capital injection will not only help operators meet regulatory requirements but also strengthen the overall resilience of the industry. The firm notes that enhanced capitalisation is expected to improve insurers’ risk underwriting capacity and support faster claims settlement, a long-standing concern within the market.
Beyond capital adequacy, the report points to ongoing investments in digital infrastructure and evolving distribution models as additional growth drivers that could reshape the competitive landscape and improve access to insurance products across the country.






