Send money from Oman to Nigeria
A shortlist of providers verified to serve this route — and exactly how the money reaches a Nigerian bank account.
Our comparison engine doesn't price Oman-origin transfers yet. Instead, here's a shortlist of providers verified to move money on this corridor — confirm their live rate and fee on their own site before you send.
Indicative options · not a live quote
Sending money from Oman to Nigeria
Our live price comparison can't quote Oman-origin transfers yet, but money genuinely moves on this route. Expatriate workers make up a large share of Oman's population, and while the Nigerian community is small, established money-transfer services carry regular family support home. The providers below are verified to serve the corridor and pay straight into a Nigerian bank account in naira. Rates and fees are set by each provider and must be confirmed on their own site before you send.
| Provider | Payout method | Speed | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank deposit (NUBAN) or cash pickup | Minutes to same day | Visit site | |
| Bank deposit (NUBAN) or cash pickup | Minutes to same day (bank deposit can take longer) | Visit site | |
| Bank deposit, cash pickup or wallet | Minutes to same day | Visit site | |
| Bank deposit to a Nigerian account | Same day | Visit site |
Almost every transfer from Oman to Nigeria now lands as a direct deposit into the recipient's Nigerian bank account, paid out in naira. The account is identified by a 10-digit NUBAN number, and Nigeria's instant-payment rail (NIP) usually credits it within minutes once the provider releases the money. The headline fee is only part of the picture — what really decides the cost is the margin added to the exchange rate, so always compare the naira that actually arrive, not just the upfront fee.
Why Oman to Nigeria shows no live prices yet
Currency Expert's live comparison engine prices transfers that start in the UK and a handful of other major sending countries, where the providers we connect to operate. None of those providers currently quote transfers that start in Oman, so the route comes back empty even though real services move money on it every day.
Until we can pull live Oman rates, this page lists providers verified to serve the corridor rather than a live price table. Treat the page as a shortlist, not a quote — and always confirm the rate and fee on the provider's own site before you commit.
How the money reaches Nigeria
Nearly all transfers land as a direct deposit into the recipient's Nigerian bank account. The account is identified by a 10-digit NUBAN number, and Nigeria's instant-payment system (NIP) means the money usually appears within minutes once the provider releases it. Cash pickup exists too, but for anything over about 200 US dollars the payout must go into a bank account.
By law, the money is paid out to your recipient in Nigerian naira — Nigeria's central bank requires all inbound transfers to be delivered in local currency, so the recipient can't be paid in dollars or rials.
What sending money to Nigeria really costs
Oman to Nigeria is not a cheap corridor — an all-in cost of 3 to 8 percent is common on a traditional bank wire. The headline fee is only part of it; the bigger number is usually hidden inside the exchange rate. Here's where each slice goes.
The exchange-rate margin
This is normally the largest cost — the gap between the real mid-market rate and the rate you're offered. Exchange houses and banks often add a couple of percent or more; on a larger transfer this dwarfs any upfront fee.
Oman's 5% VAT on the fee
Oman charges 5% VAT, which can apply to the provider's transfer fee (not to the money you send). It's small, but it's one reason to compare the all-in cost across providers.
The official-rate rule
Nigerian regulators require money-transfer operators to pay out at the prevailing market rate, so quoted rates between compliant providers are closer than they used to be. Compare the naira that actually arrive, not just the fee shown.
Tax and rules on each side
Sending from Oman
Oman charges no personal income tax and no gift or exit tax on money individuals send abroad, though a 5% VAT can apply to a provider's service fee. There are no exchange controls on personal transfers — the rial is fully convertible and pegged to the US dollar — so you can send freely through a licensed provider overseen by the Central Bank of Oman. Send with a valid Omani Resident Card or passport.
Receiving in Nigeria
Nigeria does not tax personal or family remittances — genuine transfers for support or gifts aren't treated as taxable income. But by central-bank rule the money is paid out only in naira, at the official market rate. If a recipient is promised a dollar payout on this route, treat it as a red flag.
Funding your transfer without overpaying
Paying from an Oman bank account or a debit card is usually the cheapest way to fund a transfer. Funding with a credit card is often treated by the card issuer as a cash advance, which can trigger a one-off fee and interest from day one with no grace period — quietly making a cheap-looking transfer expensive. Check how your card treats the payment before you use it, and have your Omani Resident Card to hand for the identity check.
Scams to watch on this route
Most traps on this corridor target the sender with a fake reason to pay, or the recipient with a fake windfall. These few rules are worth passing on.
Advance-fee ("419") schemes
Rule: never pay an upfront "fee", "tax" or "clearance" to unlock a larger sum you've supposedly been promised. Genuine money never requires you to pay to receive it.
Job and visa offers
Rule: be very wary of anyone asking you to send money to secure a job, visa or travel. Legitimate employers and agents don't collect fees this way over a remittance app.
Romance and "emergency" requests
Rule: an urgent request for money from an online partner or a "relative in trouble" may be an impersonator. Confirm directly on a number you already know before sending anything.
Confirm before you send
Rule: check the recipient's name and 10-digit NUBAN against details they sent you in writing, and use a verified provider rather than a stranger offering a "better rate" off-platform.
How most people send money from Oman to Nigeria
For most people sending money from Oman to Nigeria, the simplest route is a verified provider paying into the recipient's Nigerian bank account (NUBAN) in naira over the instant NIP rail. Because we can't show a live quote here yet, treat this page as a vetted shortlist — then judge each option by the naira that actually arrive after the rate margin, and confirm the recipient's details before you send.
Oman to Nigeria transfers: frequently asked questions
Our live comparison engine prices transfers that start in the UK and a few other major sending countries. It doesn't yet quote transfers that start in Oman, so instead of an empty table we list providers verified to serve the corridor. Confirm the live rate and fee on each provider's own site before you send.
Usually the recipient's full name and their 10-digit NUBAN bank account number, plus the name of their Nigerian bank. For cash pickup you'll need the recipient's name and a reference number. You'll also need your own valid ID — an Omani Resident Card or passport — to send.
Naira. Nigeria's central bank requires all inbound money transfers to be paid out to the recipient in local currency at the official market rate, so the money arrives as Nigerian naira in their bank account. If anyone promises a dollar cash payout on this route, treat it as a warning sign.
Bank deposits usually arrive within minutes, because Nigeria's instant-payment rail (NIP) credits accounts in real time once the provider releases the money. Cash pickup is typically available the same day. The provider will show an estimated delivery time before you confirm.
This is not a cheap corridor — an all-in cost of roughly 3 to 8 percent is common on traditional routes. Most of that hides in the exchange-rate margin rather than the upfront fee. Because Nigerian rules now require operators to use the official market rate, compliant providers are closer on rate than they used to be, so compare the naira that actually arrive.
No. Nigeria does not tax personal or family remittances — genuine transfers sent for support or as gifts are not treated as taxable income. Oman charges no tax on individuals sending money abroad (though 5% VAT can apply to a provider's fee). Tax only applies to income earned from work, business or investments, not to family support.
Paying from an Oman bank account or a debit card is usually cheapest. Avoid funding with a credit card where you can — issuers often treat it as a cash advance, adding a one-off fee and interest from day one. And always compare the exchange-rate margin, not just the upfront fee, since the margin is where most of the cost hides.
Our sources & how we keep this current
Last reviewed: 1 July 2026. We re-check the providers and rules on this corridor regularly, and will switch this page to a live price table as soon as our engine can quote Oman-origin transfers.
Affiliate disclosure: the "Visit site" links to some providers are affiliate links. Currency Expert may earn a commission, at no cost to you, if you open an account through them. It never changes which providers we list or the order they appear in.