The Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) is seeking a licence from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to operate a microfinance bank.
The agency said such would aid the direct disbursement and monitoring of funds meant for small businesses, as well as attract more international development finance.
The agency is also lobbying the Presidency for one million more small businesses.
SMEDAN, Director-General, Charles Odii, disclosed this during a media parley in Abuja on Wednesday, where he unveiled the agency’s five-point agenda for 2026, covering business formalisation, policy overhaul, financing, capacity building and infrastructure.
Odii said the push would significantly expand Nigeria’s MSME base, as government intensifies efforts to bring informal operators into the formal economy.
According to him, “And that is actually what 2026 is going to do; it is going to unfold all the good things that we’ve worked on for the last 18 to 24 months. And the first one will basically be the formalisation of our small businesses. In 2026, we would have over 250,000 new registered businesses, but we’re pushing with the presidency for another one million.”
He disclosed that SMEDAN plans to unveil a revised National MSME Policy in 2026, as the current policy framework last reviewed in 2021, expires by the end of this year.
“The second most important thing that will happen in 2026 is that we’re going to unveil the national MSME policy. We have a policy that governs the MSME ecosystem. And many of you are aware that the policy lasts for five years. The last one was done in 2021, and by the 31st of December, it should be reviewed,” he added.
He said the review process would be participatory, stressing that policies affecting MSMEs must reflect the realities of operators across the 36 states and the FCT, with completion targeted for the first quarter of 2026.
On financing, the SMEDAN boss emphasised that access to affordable credit would be a major focus in 2026, of about N12 billion, with the agency brokering single-digit loans for millions of small businesses nationwide.
