Access Bank Plc said it recently discovered a mistake in its
operations records, whereby stamp duty charges on applicable transactions were
not passed on to customers. The omissions occurred between February 1st, 2020,
and April 30th, 2020.
The tier-1 bank said it is deeply apologetic for this error.
However, all concerned customers are to prepare to pay off the accrued charges.
According to an email that was sent by Access Bank to its
customers over the weekend, the accrued N50 stamp duty charge will be debited
from applicable customers’ accounts for remittance to the Central Bank of
Nigeria, CBN. Concerned customers were, therefore, advised to keep enough money
in their bank accounts in order to accommodate the charge.
“We recently discovered that the charges on applicable
transactions carried out between February 1, 2020, and April 30, 2020, were
inadvertently not passed on your account. We sincerely apologise for this.
“However, in compliance with the CBN mandate, we will be
required to process the accumulated charges for the said period on your account
for remittance to the Central Bank of Nigeria. We request that you fund your
account to accommodate this charge,” part of the email from the bank said.
As the email by Access Bank further explained, the Central Bank of Nigeria requires that a stamp duty charge of N50 be imposed on savings and current account holders for transactions (both deposits and electronic transfers) exceeding N10, 000.
As Nairametrics earlier reported, the N50 stamp duty charge was reviewed in the Federal Government’s latest finance bill which took effect earlier this year. The revision is such that instead of customers would be required to pay the N50 stamp duty only if their deposits or transfers exceed N10,000. This is against an earlier (controversial) practice of imposing a stamp duty of N50 for every deposit/transfer exceeding only N1,000.
culled from https://nairametrics.com/
culled from https://nairametrics.com/
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