[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
Consent vs legitimate interest Nigeria

Consent vs Legitimate Interest in Nigeria: Which Lawful Basis Should Your Business Use?

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 hours ago

Every business processing personal data in Nigeria must anchor each processing activity to a lawful basis under the Nigeria Data Protection Act 2023 (NDPA). For most commercial operations, marketing campaigns, customer analytics, employee records, cross-border transfers, the practical choice comes down to two options: consent or legitimate interest. Choosing between consent vs legitimate interest in Nigeria is no longer a theoretical exercise: the Nigeria Data Protection Commission (NDPC) intensified enforcement through 2025 and into 2026, issuing its General Application and Implementation Directive (GAID) with explicit requirements for documented Legitimate Interest Assessments (LIAs) and tighter audit scrutiny. Get the choice wrong and you face administrative fines, remedial orders, and reputational damage.

This guide delivers a direct, dimension-by-dimension comparison, a ready-to-use decision framework, and the concrete triggers that should send you to a data protection lawyer.

Option A: Consent Under the NDPA

Legal Definition and Statutory Requirements

Under the NDPA, consent must be freely given, specific, informed, and unambiguous. The data subject must clearly indicate agreement to the processing of their personal data for one or more specified purposes. Silence, pre-ticked boxes, or inactivity do not constitute valid consent. For sensitive personal data, including health records, biometric data, religious beliefs, and political opinions, the NDPA imposes a higher threshold, requiring explicit consent unless a statutory exception applies.

The NDPC’s GAID reinforces these requirements and adds operational expectations: controllers must maintain granular records proving that each consent was validly obtained, and privacy notices must be clear enough for the average data subject to understand what they are agreeing to.

Practical Consent Mechanics

Implementing consent as your lawful basis demands specific operational infrastructure:

  • Active opt-in. Each processing purpose requires a separate, affirmative action, bundled consent for multiple unrelated purposes is unlikely to satisfy the NDPA’s specificity requirement.
  • Granularity. Where you process data for marketing, analytics, and service delivery, you need separate consent capture for each.
  • Withdrawal mechanism. Data subjects must be able to withdraw consent as easily as they gave it. Withdrawal must halt processing and you cannot penalise the data subject for exercising this right.
  • Recordkeeping. Maintain timestamped logs of who consented, when, to what purpose, and through which interface. These records are your primary audit evidence if the NDPC investigates.

When Consent Is Mandatory

Consent is not merely one option among equals, in certain scenarios it is the only permissible lawful basis under the NDPA and GAID:

  • Sensitive personal data. Processing health, biometric, genetic, or political data requires explicit consent unless a narrow statutory exception applies.
  • Electronic direct marketing. Where sector-specific rules or GAID provisions require opt-in for commercial electronic messages, consent is the mandatory basis.
  • Children’s data. Processing personal data of minors below the statutory age threshold requires verifiable parental or guardian consent.
  • Cross-border transfers to non-adequate jurisdictions. Explicit consent may be required where no adequacy determination or appropriate safeguards exist.

Option B: Legitimate Interest Under the NDPA

Statutory Position in the NDPA and GAID

Legitimate interest is recognised as a lawful basis for processing under Section 25 of the NDPA. This represents a significant development from the earlier Nigeria Data Protection Regulation (NDPR), which omitted legitimate interest entirely and forced controllers to rely almost exclusively on consent. Under the NDPA, a controller or third party may process personal data where the processing is necessary for the purposes of their legitimate interests, provided those interests are not overridden by the rights and freedoms of the data subject.

The NDPC’s GAID tightens this considerably. Controllers relying on legitimate interest must now prepare and maintain a documented Legitimate Interest Assessment (LIA) that demonstrates each step of the analysis. The GAID makes clear that an undocumented reliance on legitimate interest will not withstand NDPC audit scrutiny.

The Three-Part Test

Legitimate interest under the NDPA mirrors the widely adopted three-part test structure. Each element must be satisfied and documented:

  • Purpose test. Identify the specific legitimate interest being pursued. It must be lawful, clearly articulated, and real, not vague or speculative. Common qualifying interests include fraud prevention, network security, internal administrative purposes, and direct marketing where the data subject reasonably expects it.
  • Necessity test. Confirm that the processing is genuinely necessary to achieve the identified interest. If you can achieve the same purpose through less intrusive means, legitimate interest fails at this stage.
  • Balancing test. Weigh the controller’s interest against the data subject’s rights, interests, and reasonable expectations. Consider the nature of the data, the relationship between controller and data subject, the potential impact on the individual, and whether adequate safeguards or mitigations are in place.

When Legitimate Interest Is Unsuitable

Legitimate interest is not a catch-all alternative to consent. It will fail or attract high enforcement risk in these situations:

  • The processing involves sensitive personal data (the NDPA does not permit legitimate interest for most sensitive data categories).
  • Electronic direct marketing is involved and sector rules or GAID provisions require consent.
  • There is a significant imbalance of power between the controller and data subject (e.g., employer–employee relationships in certain contexts).
  • The processing would be unexpected or surprising to the data subject, making the balancing test difficult to satisfy.

Consent vs Legitimate Interest in Nigeria: Side-by-Side Comparison

The following table is the centrepiece of this analysis. Use it to compare the two lawful bases across every decision dimension that matters to NDPC audit readiness and operational cost.

Dimension Consent Legitimate Interest
Legal test (NDPA/GAID) Freely given, specific, informed, unambiguous; recorded and withdrawable at any time Three-part test: purpose + necessity + balancing; documented LIA required by GAID
Typical use cases Electronic direct marketing; sensitive data; children’s data; cross-border transfers without safeguards Fraud prevention; network security; internal analytics; marketing where reasonable expectation exists
Documentation required Consent logs (timestamp, purpose, mechanism); withdrawal records; privacy notice Written LIA with balancing analysis, mitigation measures, periodic review schedule; privacy notice
NDPC enforcement risk High if consent is coerced, bundled, or poorly recorded, loss of lawful basis + fines High if LIA is missing, incomplete, or fails balancing test, fines and remedial orders
Reversibility Data subject can withdraw at any time; processing must stop Not subject to withdrawal, but controller must reassess if circumstances change
Direct marketing Required for electronic direct marketing under most sector rules and GAID Permissible only in narrow cases where data subjects reasonably expect marketing and LIA passes
Audit evidence Consent records, IP/device logs, interface screenshots Comprehensive LIA document, DPIA (where applicable), mitigation evidence, policy records
Implementation cost Higher, consent management platform, ongoing recordkeeping, churn from opt-out Lower at collection point but higher governance cost; major financial exposure if LIA is inadequate

Three quick rules emerge from this comparison:

  • If the NDPA or GAID requires consent for the specific data type or processing activity, legitimate interest is not available, use consent.
  • If consent would be impractical or would undermine the processing purpose (e.g., fraud detection), and the balancing test is clearly satisfied, legitimate interest is the appropriate basis.
  • Whichever basis you choose, documentation is non-negotiable. The NDPC expects evidence, consent logs or a written LIA, at audit.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: Consent vs Legitimate Interest Nigeria

Eligibility and Necessity

Both lawful bases are available under Section 25 of the NDPA, but they are not interchangeable. Consent is the only route for sensitive data processing (absent a statutory exception). Legitimate interest requires a genuine necessity link, if the same outcome can be achieved without processing the personal data in question, the necessity test fails and the basis collapses.

Cost and Quantified Enforcement Exposure

The financial exposure for choosing the wrong basis or implementing it poorly is material. The NDPA empowers the NDPC to impose administrative fines, and the GAID sets enforcement expectations that are already being applied.

Item / Exposure Consent Legitimate Interest
Implementation cost Consent management platform: US$2k–US$20k+ depending on scale; ongoing recordkeeping staff time LIA documentation + DPO review: US$1k–US$15k depending on complexity; lower tech spend
NDPC fine exposure Fines and remediation orders if consent found invalid or coerced Fines up to 2% of annual gross revenue or minimum ₦2,000,000 for data controllers of minor importance; higher thresholds for major controllers
Ongoing operational cost High, granular consent management for multiple purposes; higher opt-out handling burden Moderate, fewer collection friction costs but higher governance and periodic LIA review overhead

Timing and Speed to Launch

Consent-based processing can delay product and campaign launches because consent capture flows must be designed, tested, and deployed before any data collection begins. Legitimate interest can be faster to operationalise at the point of collection, but only if the LIA has been completed and documented in advance. Rushing to rely on legitimate interest without a defensible LIA is the single most common compliance failure the NDPC targets.

Liability and Remedies

Under the NDPA, the NDPC can issue remedial and enforcement orders, impose administrative fines, order compensation to affected data subjects, and in severe cases refer matters for criminal prosecution. Both lawful bases expose controllers to civil claims from data subjects. The risk profile differs: consent failures tend to produce individual complaints and class actions, while LIA failures tend to trigger NDPC-initiated audits and sector-wide investigations.

Enforceability and Practical NDPC Tests

The GAID makes the NDPC’s expectations explicit: controllers relying on legitimate interest must produce a documented LIA that covers purpose identification, necessity analysis, balancing test reasoning, and mitigation measures. Periodic review of the LIA is expected, particularly when the processing context changes. For consent, the NDPC expects verifiable records demonstrating each element of valid consent.

What Changed in 2026: The Lawful Basis NDPA 2026 Landscape

The enforcement environment for consent vs legitimate interest in Nigeria shifted materially between 2024 and 2026. The NDPC issued its GAID in 2025, creating binding implementation standards that go beyond the NDPA’s statutory text. Key changes affecting the lawful basis choice include:

  • Documented LIAs are now mandatory. The GAID requires controllers relying on legitimate interest to maintain a written assessment covering each step of the three-part test. An undocumented reliance on legitimate interest is treated as a compliance failure.
  • Audit intensity increased. The NDPC’s 2025 Annual Report confirmed a rise in sector-specific audits and compliance investigations, with lawful basis documentation as a primary audit checkpoint.
  • Fines are being imposed. Industry observers expect the enforcement pace to continue accelerating in 2026 and beyond, with the NDPC demonstrating willingness to impose meaningful financial penalties on controllers that cannot justify their chosen lawful basis.
  • Consent standards tightened. The GAID reinforces that consent must be specific and granular, bundled or vague consent forms are increasingly likely to be found non-compliant.

The practical implication is straightforward: in 2026, both lawful bases demand robust documentation. The era of informal reliance on either consent or legitimate interest, without auditable evidence, is over.

Decision Framework: When to Choose Consent, When to Choose Legitimate Interest

Use the following framework to make the lawful basis decision for each processing activity. This is not a one-time exercise, the GAID expects controllers to reassess when processing contexts change.

If your priority is… Choose…
Processing sensitive personal data (health, biometric, political) Consent
Electronic direct marketing to new contacts Consent
Processing children’s data Consent
Cross-border transfer without adequacy or safeguards Consent
Fraud detection or prevention Legitimate Interest
Network and information security Legitimate Interest
Internal analytics where data subjects reasonably expect it Legitimate Interest
Existing customer marketing with reasonable expectation Legitimate Interest (with documented LIA)

Choose consent when:

  • The processing is intrusive or involves sensitive personal data, the NDPA requires explicit consent for such processing.
  • The activity is electronic direct marketing and sector rules or the GAID indicate consent is required.
  • You cannot demonstrate necessity or reasonable expectation, the balancing test would fail.
  • You need a reversible lawful basis where user withdrawal is expected, such as marketing preference management.

Choose legitimate interest when:

  • Processing is necessary for security, fraud prevention, or anonymised analytics, and the data subject reasonably expects the processing.
  • You have robust governance in place: a documented LIA, a DPIA where appropriate, mitigation measures, and transparent privacy notices.
  • Consent would be impractical or would undermine the processing purpose (e.g., requiring consent for fraud screening would defeat its purpose), and the balancing test is satisfied.
  • You can demonstrate the processing creates no significant risk to data subject rights and that adequate safeguards are in place.

When to Engage a Lawyer

Many lawful basis decisions can be made internally using the framework above. However, certain situations demand professional legal advice before processing begins. Engage a data protection lawyer in Nigeria when:

  • Your processing involves cross-border transfers to jurisdictions without NDPC adequacy determinations, the interplay between lawful basis and transfer mechanisms is complex.
  • You are processing sensitive personal data at scale (health tech, insurance, biometric identity) and need to determine whether a consent exception applies.
  • Your business is classified as a data controller of major importance under the NDPA, exposing you to higher fine thresholds and more intensive NDPC scrutiny.
  • You anticipate an NDPC audit or investigation and need to ensure your LIA or consent documentation is defensible.
  • You are launching a direct marketing campaign across multiple channels and need to map each channel to the correct lawful basis under GAID.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Paul Mgbeoma at Tayo Oyetibo LP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Nigeria Data Protection Act, 2023 (NDPA)
  2. NDPC General Application and Implementation Directive (GAID) 2025
  3. NDPC Annual Report 2025
  4. ICLG, Data Protection Laws and Regulations: Nigeria
  5. Recording Law, Nigeria Data Privacy Laws
  6. ICO, Legitimate Interests Guidance

FAQs

What is the difference between legitimate interest and consent under Nigerian law?
Consent requires the data subject to give freely given, specific, informed, and unambiguous agreement to defined processing purposes. Legitimate interest allows processing without the data subject’s explicit agreement, provided the controller can demonstrate a genuine interest, necessity, and that the processing does not override the data subject’s rights. Both are lawful bases under Section 25 of the NDPA, but they impose different documentation and operational obligations.
Yes. The NDPA expressly recognises legitimate interest as a lawful basis, a departure from the earlier NDPR, which omitted it. However, the NDPC’s GAID requires a documented Legitimate Interest Assessment demonstrating purpose, necessity, and balancing. Relying on legitimate interest without a written LIA is a compliance failure that exposes the controller to enforcement action.
Consent is the correct choice when processing sensitive personal data, collecting children’s data, conducting electronic direct marketing to new contacts, or transferring data cross-border without adequate safeguards. It is also preferable when the balancing test would fail because the processing is unexpected or intrusive from the data subject’s perspective.
For electronic direct marketing, email, SMS, automated calls, consent is the safer and typically required basis, consistent with the GAID and international best practice. Legitimate interest may be available for non-electronic marketing to existing customers who reasonably expect such communications, but only where a documented LIA supports the conclusion and an opt-out mechanism is provided.
Switching lawful bases mid-processing is legally problematic. You should not use both bases simultaneously for the same processing activity. If you initially relied on consent and wish to switch to legitimate interest, you must conduct a full LIA, update your privacy notice, and be prepared to justify the change to the NDPC. The safer approach is to identify the correct lawful basis before processing begins.
The NDPC can issue remedial and enforcement orders requiring you to stop processing, impose administrative fines, up to 2% of annual gross revenue or a minimum of ₦2,000,000 for data controllers of minor importance, order compensation to affected data subjects, and in severe cases make criminal referrals. The GAID makes clear that an absent or deficient LIA is treated as a failure to establish a lawful basis.
Engage counsel when your processing involves cross-border transfers, sensitive data at scale, direct marketing across multiple channels, or when you are a controller of major importance. A lawyer is also essential if you are facing or anticipate an NDPC audit, or need a bespoke LIA that will withstand regulatory scrutiny.
how to register for ekap
By Global Law Experts

posted 18 minutes ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Consent vs Legitimate Interest in Nigeria: Which Lawful Basis Should Your Business Use?

Send welcome message

Custom Message