
Of every document generated during Nigerian market entry, the Certificate of Capital Importation is the one whose absence causes the most damage years later — not at entry, but when the investor tries to repatriate dividends, loan interest or divestment proceeds.
What the CCI actually does
The CCI is the CBN-recognised record that capital, cash or in kind, entered Nigeria through an authorised dealer bank. Without it, a bank has no basis to process a repatriation request under the applicable foreign exchange regulations — the money can be legitimately earned and still functionally trapped.
An investor who gets the entry structure right but skips the CCI has built a company that can receive capital but cannot legally send returns back out.
The common failure points
CCIs issued in the wrong currency, against the wrong inflow channel, or with a value that does not match the actual capital contribution documented in the company’s records, are routinely rejected by banks when a repatriation request is finally made — often years after the CCI was issued and the error can no longer be easily corrected.
Getting it right at entry
The fix is procedural discipline at the point of inflow: every tranche of capital, whether equity or shareholder loan, needs its own CCI, correctly matched to the inflow record, filed and retained from day one — not reconstructed under pressure when the investor is ready to exit.
This note is general commentary on Nigerian legal practice and does not constitute legal advice or create a lawyer–client relationship. Outcomes depend on the specific facts and the applicable law at the time. For advice on a particular matter, speak with the firm.

