The National Pension Commission and the Nigeria Labour Congress Lagos State Council have announced a sweeping enforcement operation targeting employers accused of illegally withholding workers’ pension contributions.
The joint crackdown, scheduled to commence on June 1, 2026, is expected to affect both private and public sector organizations that deduct pension contributions from employees’ salaries without remitting the funds to their respective Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs).
Authorities described the move as one of the strongest pension compliance actions in recent years, warning that defaulting employers could face severe financial sanctions, legal prosecution, and possible exclusion from Nigeria’s rapidly growing pension industry now valued at over ₦29 trillion.
The new enforcement task force was created amid growing complaints from workers who discovered that years of pension deductions were never remitted by their employers despite monthly salary deductions.
Speaking on the development, Funmi Sessi said pension contributions are a fundamental entitlement of Nigerian workers and must not be diverted, delayed, or manipulated by employers under any circumstance.
According to her, the partnership between PenCom and the labour union signals a new phase of aggressive accountability aimed at protecting workers’ retirement savings and restoring confidence in Nigeria’s pension system.
She warned employers still owing pension remittances to immediately regularize their records before the June 1 enforcement deadline or risk facing serious consequences.
Under the Pension Reform Act, all eligible employers are legally required to participate in the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) and remit deductions within the approved timeframe.
Failure to comply attracts penalties, including a minimum fine of 2 percent of the unpaid contribution for every month the remittance remains outstanding.
Regulators also indicated that persistent violators could face additional fines, court action, and restrictions from participating in activities linked to Nigeria’s pension ecosystem.
Employers were advised to process all pension payments through approved channels and activate their compliance portals on PenCom’s official platform to avoid enforcement measures.
Financial analysts say the operation could significantly boost pension remittance compliance across Nigeria while exposing companies allegedly exploiting workers through illegal withholding of retirement contributions.
Labour experts have also praised the initiative, arguing that stronger enforcement is necessary to prevent pension abuse and secure the financial future of millions of Nigerian workers.
The announcement has already triggered reactions within Nigeria’s business community, with many companies reportedly reviewing their pension compliance status ahead of the enforcement deadline.
Industry observers believe the success of the exercise could mark a major turning point in the fight against pension fraud and non-remittance practices in Nigeria.
This story is still developing.