By our Reporter
The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has allowed next-of-kin, legal representatives, or beneficial owners to claim unclaimed balances in dormant accounts.
The CBN clarified this in a report released over the weekend. It stated that next-of-kin can now claim unclaimed funds by submitting applications to financial institutions. These applications must include legal proof of title and, for corporate entities, details of directors and authorized signatories.
The CBN has the authority to manage dormant accounts and unclaimed funds. It can receive and manage these funds in trust for account holders. A dedicated office, supervised by a management committee, will oversee this process.
The CBN will place unclaimed funds in the Unclaimed Balances Trust Fund (UBTF) Pool Account and invest them in treasury bills and other securities. The principal and any interest will be refunded to beneficiaries within 10 working days of a reclaim request. Account owners must visit financial institutions to complete a reclaim form, provide evidence of ownership, a sworn affidavit, and valid ID. Financial institutions will verify the claim and send it to the CBN within 10 days.
The CBN will refund the money within 10 days of receiving the request.
If a financial institution’s license is withdrawn, the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) will manage dormant accounts. Balances in dormant domiciliary accounts are also affected by this policy, but active domiciliary accounts are not.
An inactive account has no customer-initiated transactions for six to 12 months. A dormant account remains inactive for one year or more.
Unclaimed balances are those that have been dormant for at least 10 years.
Eligible accounts include current, savings, term deposits, domiciliary accounts, deposits for shares, prepaid card accounts, government-owned accounts, and more. Exempt accounts are those under litigation, investigation, or encumbered.
More details later.