The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has mandated that banks, fintech companies, and other licensed payment operators install GPS tracking on all Point of Sale (PoS) terminals to enhance monitoring of electronic transactions.
TheNewsGuru.com(TNG) reports that the director of the payments system supervision department Rakiya Yusuf disclosed that the apex bank mandated that all PoS devices must be equipped with native geo-location services and double frequency GPS receivers for accurate location tracking.
In the directive dated August 25th, operators are required to register each terminal with a payment terminal service aggregator and provide the precise coordinates of the merchant’s or agent’s business location.
Every Point of Sale (PoS) machine must capture and transmit its location data at the start of each transaction. Any activity conducted outside a 10-meter radius of the registered business location will be flagged. Additionally, terminals that are not properly geo-tagged will be unable to process payments.
The CBN has stipulated a 60 day period for all existing devices to be geo tagged, while new terminals must be tagged prior to their certification and activation.
It stated, “Geo location data must be captured at transaction initiation and included in the message payload as a mandatory reporting field, terminals not directly routed to a PTSA are not permitted to transact.
“All existing terminals and newly registered terminals must ensure strict adherence always to approved MSC code per sector
“All existing terminals must be geo tagged within 60 days of this circular; new terminals going forward must be geo tagged before certification and activation.”
The measures come amid a surge in the use of PoS machines across Nigeria.
Once considered an alternative, PoS agents have become a central part of the country’s cash economy, handling millions of payments daily as banks cut branch networks and ATMs often run dry.
But the boom has also created risks, as fraud complaints involving PoS agents have increased, and security officials say kidnappers have, in some cases, forced victims to transfer ransom money through nearby PoS operators to avoid detection.
The CBN also directed payment companies to adopt a new global standard for transaction messages, known as ISO 20022, by 31 October.
The standard, developed by SWIFT, is expected to improve the quality of transaction data and make both domestic and cross-border payments more secure and efficient.
All PoS devices must run on Android version 10 or higher to integrate with the national central switch, which will host the software kit for geolocation monitoring and geofencing.
It added, “All payment transaction messages exchanged domestically or internationally must be formatted in ISO 20022 in line with CBN and SWIFT specifications.
“All Institutions shall ensure complete and accurate population of mandatory data elements, including payer/payee identifiers, merchant/agent identifiers, and transaction metadata.
“All in scope institutions must complete migration activities and be fully compliant not later than October 31.”
The bank said it would begin compliance checks by 20 October.