The National Pension Commission (PenCom) has unveiled a comprehensive operational roadmap for 2026, introducing child pension registration and foreign currency-denominated contribution options as part of efforts to deepen financial inclusion across Nigeria.
The new strategy was outlined in PenCom’s Q4 2025 Quarterly Industry Report titled “Stronger Pensions, Stronger Nigeria.”
According to the commission, the roadmap marks the launch of what it describes as “Pension Revolution 2.0,” a reform aimed at encouraging Nigerians to adopt structured retirement planning from an early age.
A key feature of the initiative is the introduction of child registration under the micro-pension scheme.
PenCom is encouraging parents to use cash gifts received during newborn naming ceremonies as seed funds to open Personal Pension Plan (PPP) accounts for their children.
“The Commission is advising parents to take the cash gifts and monetary donations realised during their newborns’ naming ceremonies and utilise them as the initial seed funds to register and open a Personal Pension Plan account for the child,” the commission stated.
The regulator said the initiative is designed to redirect celebratory cash gifts into long-term savings instead of short-term household expenses.
According to PenCom, the move is intended to promote a culture of financial discipline and wealth preservation from infancy.
“By encouraging parents to plan for and secure their children’s financial foundation from infancy, the Commission is fostering a generational shift where the next generation grows up with an entrenched, natural culture of structured savings and wealth preservation,” the report added.
Beyond child registration, the commission said it is expanding access to pension products for workers in the informal sector, micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), and Nigerians living abroad.
As part of the reforms, PenCom will introduce foreign currency-denominated pension contributions to attract the Nigerian diaspora.
It also plans to promote flexible bi-monthly contingent withdrawals to provide contributors with greater liquidity while maintaining long-term retirement savings.
The commission said it will publish quarterly funding conversion targets for Pension Fund Operators to improve transparency and performance.
To increase participation, PenCom is activating Accredited Pension Agents across communities to register contributors at the grassroots level.
The regulator added that it is strengthening partnerships with cooperatives, fintech companies, telecommunications operators and trade unions to expand the reach of the micro-pension scheme.
The roadmap also includes measures to improve retiree welfare through affordable health insurance.
PenCom said it is collaborating with the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) and Health Maintenance Organisations (HMOs) to introduce a low-cost health insurance scheme for low-income retirees and contributors.
At the same time, the commission announced tougher enforcement measures against employers and organisations that fail to comply with pension regulations.
“We are strengthening enforcement against defaulting employers, MDAs, and private operators through rigorous inspection, surveillance, and sanctions, alongside a States Compliance Roundtable in 2026 to track Subnational CPS Adoption,” the commission said.
PenCom said the reforms are designed to strengthen the pension industry, improve compliance and encourage a new generation of Nigerians to embrace long-term financial planning.













