Nigeria’s data protection ecosystem is expected to move into a tougher phase in 2026, defined by stronger regulatory enforcement, rising court actions, and increased board-level ownership of privacy compliance, according to DataPro, a licensed data protection compliance organisation.

The outlook follows sweeping changes in 2025, when the country fully transitioned from the Nigeria Data Protection Regulation to the statutory framework of the Nigeria Data Protection Act (NDPA) and the General Application and Implementation Directive (GAID) 2025. The move shifted compliance from voluntary guidelines to a mandatory, enforcement-driven regime.

“2026 will be defined by governance ownership, and litigation readiness,” DataPro said in a statement released during its 2026 Privacy Week activities. 

“Privacy will no longer be an IT-only concern but a standing board and executive issue requiring regular risk reporting and dedicated compliance budgets,” it added.

The firm expects a surge in individual privacy claims following the court rulings in 2025 that affirmed transparency in personal data handling as a constitutional right. Courts awarded significant damages to data subjects affected by breaches, while regulatory settlements involving multinational technology companies raised standards for data processing and behavioural advertising.

Read also: Data Protection Day is not about compliance – It’s about corporate credibility

“These precedents signal that organisational size no longer shields companies from accountability,” DataPro said, warning businesses to strengthen internal controls and preserve processing records in anticipation of increased legal scrutiny.

Cybersecurity risks are also projected to intensify in 2026, with attackers shifting towards identity-driven campaigns that exploit valid user credentials rather than technical system flaws.

“This identity-centric threat environment has made robust access management a non-negotiable requirement for corporate resilience,” the firm noted.

Regulators are expected to increase sector-specific enforcement, focusing on high-risk industries such as fintech, healthcare, and other data-intensive sectors where sensitive personal information is widely processed.

Read also: Unlocking financial visibility: How alternative data can transform access to finance for grassroots women

DataPro also highlighted new compliance demands, including mandatory bi-annual in-house audits and stricter data protection officer certification requirements, which are set to raise the bar for corporate accountability.

While the tougher regime could increase compliance costs in the short term, the statement disclosed that it may strengthen trust in Nigeria’s digital economy over time.

“The year will test how seriously organisations treat privacy as a core governance issue,” DataPro said, adding that 2026 could mark a turning point in the maturity of Nigeria’s data protection ecosystem.

Chinwe Michael is a financial inclusion advocate and economy journalist who uses compelling storytelling to drive awareness. With a background in Banking and Finance and experience across accounting, media, and education, she applies sharp analysis and attention to detail to every piece. She simplifies complex financial and economy concepts into engaging content for Africa and global audience. Chinwe also doubles as a speaker with global recognition for her expertise.

Join BusinessDay whatsapp Channel, to stay up to date

Open In Whatsapp