State Chapter Executive Induction Programme (SCEIP)

INSTITUTE OF MORTGAGE BROKERS AND LENDERS OF NIGERIA

STATE CHAPTER EXECUTIVE INDUCTION PROGRAMME

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Lesson 3

Property and Mortgage Law

IMBL State Chapter Induction — 2026 Edition

The Laws You’ll Live With

Mortgage practice in Nigeria is built on a stack of laws, some old and some recent. You don’t need to read all of them in full — that’s a job for solicitors. But as a member of a State Chapter Executive Committee you need to know what each major statute does, when it applies, and where the practical pitfalls show up. When a broker in your state calls about a tricky title question or a client comes to a chapter event confused about a Governor’s Consent issue, you should know enough to direct them properly.

This lesson covers the legal framework, then walks through the canonical A-Z workflow of acquiring land in Nigeria — the exact procedure the IMBL Manual of Practice prescribes, with the fees and taxes that apply at each step.

3.1 The Land Use Act 1978

This is the foundation. Every conversation about property ownership in Nigeria starts here.

The Land Use Act vested all land in each state in the Governor, to be held in trust for the people of that state. Before the Act, land was held under various customary, freehold, and statutory arrangements that varied by region. The Act standardised this by replacing all those arrangements with a single national system.

In practice this means:

  • Land is held by the Governor in trust, not as the Governor’s personal property
  • Individuals and entities get rights through a Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) issued by the Governor
  • Most C of Os are issued for 99-year terms (some shorter, some for specific commercial uses)
  • Any transfer of an interest in land — sale, mortgage, lease — requires the Governor’s Consent under section 22 of the Act
  • Without Governor’s Consent, the transaction is not enforceable against the state, even if the parties have signed everything

The Governor’s Consent requirement is one of the biggest sources of delay and cost in Nigerian property transactions. In Lagos, processing through the Lands Bureau can take 3-6 months and costs several percentage points of property value in fees and taxes. Chapter executives should know the local Lands Bureau process, the current consent fees, and which agents have a good track record.

3.2 Customary Land and Family Land

Despite the Land Use Act, customary land — especially in the South-East and South-West — operates with parallel realities. A piece of land may have a Certificate of Occupancy but also have family or community claims that the C of O process didn’t fully extinguish.

For mortgage purposes, customary or family land without proper documentation cannot be used as collateral. Lenders will not accept it. A chapter executive advising a community or a family should be honest about this — until proper title is regularised, the land cannot back a mortgage.

Many states now have a Land Use Charge regime that documents and taxes property holdings, which over time helps formalise these holdings. Lagos’s Land Use Charge Law 2018 (as amended) is one of the most developed. Other states are catching up.

3.3 The Mortgage Institutions Act

The Mortgage Institutions Act sets up the regulatory framework for Primary Mortgage Banks. It defines what a PMB is, what they can and cannot do, and how the CBN supervises them.

Key features:
– PMBs are licensed by the CBN under the Mortgage Institutions Act, not the regular Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA)
– Minimum capital requirements (₦5 billion for national PMB licence, ₦2.5 billion for state-level PMB licence under recent CBN guidelines)
– PMBs are restricted in the types of products they can offer — they must focus on housing finance
– Specific rules on liquidity, capital adequacy, and corporate governance apply

You don’t need to memorise the statute. You do need to understand that PMBs are CBN-licensed specialists in housing finance, and that their existence is the legal infrastructure that makes accessible mortgages possible.

3.4 The National Housing Fund Act and Other Mortgage Laws

The NHF Act establishes the National Housing Fund and the contribution system administered by FMBN. Key provisions:

  • Mandatory 2.5% contribution by workers earning above the prescribed minimum
  • Contributions held in trust by FMBN
  • Contributors become eligible for NHF loans through partner PMBs after 6 consecutive months of contributions
  • Loans currently capped at ₦50 million per applicant
  • 6% interest rate, repayment tenor up to 30 years
  • Withdrawal of contributions on retirement or after specified events

Other mortgage-relevant federal laws: the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria Act (establishes FMBN), the Pension Reform Act 2014 (enables pension-backed mortgages), the Banks and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA) 2020.

Chapter executives must understand the NHF process because it’s the most accessible mortgage product for working Nigerians. A chapter member who can clearly explain NHF eligibility, application steps, and the role of the partner PMB has immediate value to anyone they meet — the chapter’s literacy campaigns should prioritise this.

3.5 The Investments and Securities Act 2025

The Investments and Securities Act 2025 (ISA 2025) replaced the older 2007 Act and introduced major changes:

  • Brought digital assets formally under SEC regulation
  • Established the framework for Real-World Assets Tokenisation and Offering Platforms (RATOPs) with ₦1 billion minimum capital
  • Strengthened investor protection rules
  • Updated rules for collective investment schemes including REITs

What this means for property practice: investors now have additional regulated channels into real estate beyond direct ownership. The market is becoming more diverse, more regulated, and more accessible.

3.6 The A-Z Steps in Acquiring Land in Nigeria

This section follows the canonical workflow from the IMBL Manual of Practice — the exact procedure your chapter members will guide clients through, with the fees and taxes that apply at each step. Memorise the shape of this workflow; the dollar values change with time but the structure is stable.

3.6.1 Initial Due Diligence and Search

  1. Engage a Professional — the client first engages a licensed real estate agent (and a lawyer) to guide the process.
  2. Identify the Land and Verify Seller’s Identity — once a parcel is identified (via government allocation, private sale, family land, etc.), verify the identity of the purported owner. The land identified must match documents presented.
  3. Application — submit a formal application to the relevant land registry or Ministry of Lands / Urban Development with application letter, identification, passport photos, and sometimes evidence of tax payment.
  4. Conduct a Title Search (Legal Search) — the critical step. Search at the state’s Land Registry (and at the Corporate Affairs Commission if the seller is a company) to confirm:
    – The seller is the legitimate owner
    – The nature of the title (C of O, Governor’s Consent, Deed of Assignment)
    – That the property is free from encumbrances (mortgages, liens, government acquisition, litigation)
    Search fee: typically ₦10,000–₦50,000 (varies by state)

3.6.2 The Transaction — Application and Documentation

  1. Survey Plan — engage a registered surveyor to conduct a survey and produce a Survey Plan showing boundaries and location. The plan must be “charted” at the state Surveyor-General’s office.
  2. Execute a Contract of Sale — once title is confirmed good, the buyer’s lawyer drafts a Contract of Sale signed by both parties upon agreement on price. The buyer typically makes a deposit (commonly 10%) at this stage.
  3. Pay Fees — application fee, survey fee, processing fee, and sometimes development levy. Get receipts for all payments.
  4. Execute a Deed of Assignment — after final payment, the lawyer prepares the Deed of Assignment, which transfers the seller’s unexpired interest in the land to the buyer.

3.6.3 Perfecting the Title — Obtaining or Updating the C of O

This is often called “perfection” or “registration” of title.

  1. Obtain Governor’s Consent — required under section 22 of the Land Use Act for any transfer of land interest. Submit the Deed of Assignment, Survey Plan, tax clearance certificates of the parties, and other required documents. Fees apply:
    Consent Fee: percentage of property value, typically 1.5%–3% in Lagos
    Stamp Duty: typically 0.75% for mortgages, 1.5% for conveyances (paid to FIRS or state revenue authority)
    Registration Fee: 0.5%–1% of property value
    – Other administrative fees, charting fees, assessment fees
  2. Stamping of the Deed — the Deed of Assignment must be stamped by the Stamp Duties office. An unstamped deed is inadmissible in court as evidence of title.
  3. Registration of the Deed — the stamped Deed of Assignment, Survey Plan, and receipts of payment are filed at the state’s Land Registry. This officially records the transaction and gives public notice of the change in ownership.

3.6.4 Application for a New C of O (Virgin Land or Regularisation)

  • For Virgin Government Land: apply directly to the state government for an allocation. If successful, you receive a Right of Occupancy (R of O) and subsequently a Certificate of Occupancy.
  • For Regularisation: if the land was previously unregistered (e.g., family land), apply to the state to “regularise” your title and be issued a new C of O.
  • Process: