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Sell Gift Cards in Nigeria Safely: Why Migo-Sell Gift Cards Is Becoming a Trusted Gift Card Trading Platform

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Migo Gift Card

As digital payments continue to expand across Africa, gift card trading has become one of the most practical ways for users in Nigeria and Ghana to convert digital value into cash. From Apple Gift Cards and Amazon Gift Cards to Steam, Google Play, and gaming-related cards, many users now prefer to sell gift card online to meet daily financial needs.

However, despite strong demand, the gift card exchange market in Nigeria still faces long-standing challenges. Delayed payments, unclear pricing, inconsistent verification standards, and increasing fraud cases have made trust the single most important factor when choosing a gift card trading platform.

Against this background, Migo – Sell Gift Cards is positioning itself as a more structured and reliable gift card trading app, focused on transparency, controlled verification, and predictable payouts rather than exaggerated promises.

Rising Demand, but Trust Remains the Industry’s Weak Point

For many users, converting gift cards to cash is no longer optional. While international gift cards are widely used for online shopping, subscriptions, and digital entertainment, not all Nigerian users can spend them directly within the local financial system.

As a result, redeeming gift cards for cash in Nigeria has become common practice. Yet user complaints across the market reveal recurring issues: hidden deductions, unstable gift card rates, rejected cards without explanation, and payouts that take far longer than expected.

Migo – Sell Gift Cards was developed after examining these weaknesses across the industry. Rather than competing solely on speed or headline rates, the platform aims to deliver consistency—clear rules, visible pricing, and realistic processing timelines.

Supporting High-Demand Gift Cards in Nigeria and Ghana

User demand in the Nigerian gift card market is highly diverse. Instead of limiting transactions to only a few brands, Migo – Sell Gift Cards supports a wide range of gift cards that are actively traded across Nigeria and Ghana, including:

Apple Gift Card, Amazon Gift Card, Steam Gift Card, Google Play Gift Card, Razer Gold Gift Card, Xbox Gift Card, PlayStation Gift Card, Roblox Gift Card, Vanilla Gift Card, Walmart MoneyCard, Target Gift Card, Macy’s Gift Card, Best Buy, GameStop, Nike Gift Card, Foot Locker Gift Card, Sephora Gift Card, Nordstrom, Coach Gift Card, Dollar General, NetSpend, Lowe’s, Paysafe Card, MoneyPak, American Express (Amex), go2bank, and One4All.

This broad coverage allows users to sell gift cards in Nigeria on a single platform, reducing the risks associated with switching between multiple gift card exchange services.

Controlled Speed Instead of Risky “Instant” Claims

In the gift card trading industry, “instant cashout” is often promoted but rarely explained. In practice, unverified speed frequently leads to disputes, failed payouts, or account restrictions.

Migo – Sell Gift Cards adopts a controlled processing approach, combining automated systems with manual verification to assess gift cards based on brand, type, and risk level. Once verification is completed, payouts are processed in Nigerian Naira (NGN) or Ghanaian Cedi (GHS).

This method prioritizes reliability and user protection while still aiming for timely cashouts within reasonable and clearly communicated timeframes.

Transparent Gift Card Rates in Nigeria

One of the biggest concerns for users is gift card rates in Nigeria, which can fluctuate frequently based on market conditions. Migo – Sell Gift Cards addresses this by displaying the available exchange rate before a user confirms a transaction.

Whether users want to sell Apple Gift Card, sell Steam Gift Card,sell macy’s gift card or trade other brands, pricing is visible upfront. Once a rate is accepted and verification is completed, there are no unexpected deductions, helping users better predict their final payout.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tE4_Kb6-zmU

Simple and Consistent Trading Process

To make online gift card trading accessible to both new and experienced users, Migo – Sell Gift Cards keeps its workflow straightforward:

  1. Create an account (https://www.migogiftcard.com)
  2. Select the gift card type
  3. Submit gift card details or images
  4. Verification process
  5. Cash payout

This consistent structure reduces errors, improves clarity, and supports both first-time users and frequent traders.

Raising Standards in a High-Risk Digital Market

As Nigeria’s digital finance ecosystem grows, competition among gift card trading platforms is shifting away from speed alone toward risk management, transparency, and user communication.

Migo – Sell Gift Cards states that its long-term goal goes beyond completing transactions. By maintaining clear rules, stable execution, and responsive customer support, the platform aims to contribute to higher standards across the Nigeria gift card exchange industry.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is Migo – Sell Gift Cards and how does it work?

Migo- Sell Gift Cards is a digital gift card trading platform that allows users in Nigeria and Ghana to sell gift cards online and receive cash payouts after verification.

Is Migo – Sell Gift Cards a legitimate gift card trading platform in Nigeria?

Yes. Migo – Sell Gift Cards operates with structured verification procedures, transparent pricing, and consistent payout rules designed to reduce fraud and failed transactions.

What types of gift cards can I sell on Migo – Sell Gift Cards?

Migo – Sell Gift Cards supports Apple, Amazon, Steam, Google Play, Razer Gold, Xbox, PlayStation, Roblox, Vanilla Visa, Walmart MoneyCard, Target, Macy’s, Best Buy, GameStop, Nike, Foot Locker, Sephora, Nordstrom, Coach, Dollar General, NetSpend, Lowe’s, Paysafe Card, MoneyPak, Amex, go2bank, and One4All.

How fast is payment after selling a gift card?

Payment speed depends on the gift card type and verification process. Once verified, payouts are processed in NGN or GHS as quickly as possible while maintaining security.

Does Migo – Sell Gift Cards offer instant cashout?

Migo – Sell Gift Cards focuses on reliable and predictable cashouts. Some transactions are faster than others, but all go through verification to protect users.

How are gift card rates determined in Nigeria?

Rates depend on brand, demand, card type, and risk level. Migo – Sell Gift Cards shows the available rate before transaction confirmation, with no hidden deductions after verification.

Is it safe to sell gift cards online on Migo – Sell Gift Cards?

Selling gift cards online carries risk, but Migo – Sell Gift Cards reduces this through a combination of automated systems and manual review to improve transaction safety.

Who can use Migo – Sell Gift Cards?

Migo – Sell Gift Cards currently serves users in Nigeria and Ghana.

About Migo – Sell Gift Cards

Migo – Sell Gift Cards is a digital gift card trading app serving users in Nigeria and Ghana. The platform focuses on secure verification, transparent pricing, and reliable cash payouts, helping users safely convert gift cards into cash through a structured and trustworthy process.

Website: https://www.migogiftcard.com

iOS Download Link: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/migo-sell-gift-cards/id6670494373

Playstore Download Link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.antwallet.giftcard

Dipo Olowookere is a journalist based in Nigeria that has passion for reporting business news stories. At his leisure time, he watches football and supports 3SC of Ibadan. Mr Olowookere can be reached via [email protected]

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Tony Elumelu-Backed Redtech Ranks 32nd in FT Africa Fastest Growing Companies List

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Redtech

By Adedapo Adesanya

Redtech, a technology company backed by Heirs Holdings, has been named in the Financial Times (FT) Africa’s Fastest Growing Companies 2026 list.

The Tony Elumelu-backed startup ranked 32nd out of 130 high-growth companies and also secured a position among Africa’s top 15 fastest-growing fintech companies in its debut appearance on the annual FT/Statista ranking.

Produced by the FT in research partnership with Statista, the ranking identifies Africa’s fastest-growing companies based on compound annual growth rate (CAGR) in revenue between 2021 and 2024. Companies also had to meet additional criteria, including minimum revenue thresholds, independence and primarily organic growth. Redtech’s inclusion provides independent validation of its growth as an African payment infrastructure company.

The recognition comes as Redtech’s flagship platform, RedPay, continues to scale across physical and digital payment channels. Through RedPay, the company enables businesses to collect, process, confirm, reconcile, disburse, and manage funds through secure, scalable technology built for African commerce.

Last week, the company announced a rare fintech-bank-telco alliance with MTN’s mobile fintech unit and UBA, to expand cardless payment access for consumers and merchants across Nigeria.

Speaking on the development, Mr Elumelu, the Group Chairman of Heirs Holdings, said, “Africa’s next growth era will be powered by entrepreneurs, enterprises, and the infrastructure that enables them to succeed. Redtech’s recognition among Africa’s fastest-growing companies demonstrates what is possible when we invest in solutions built for Africa’s realities. Through RedPay, Redtech is helping merchants, fintechs, and financial institutions transact with greater speed, security, intelligence, and control. This is Africapitalism in action: building profitable, sustainable businesses that create prosperity across Africa.”

The numbers have also backed up Redtech’s growth. This is visible across four strategic areas, including a boost in transaction as the company processed $27 billion (N37.2 trillion) to date, more than three times the over $8.9 billion (N12 trillion) processed by the end of 2024; it has deployed 55,000 RedPay POS terminals within 16 months across merchant locations in Nigeria, supporting payment acceptance across sectors including hospitality, energy, banking, fintech, retail, utilities, and enterprise services; while its infrastructure supports payments in five UEMOA countries – Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Mali, and Senegal.

Redtech operates with key regulatory approvals, including licences from the Central Bank of Nigeria as a Payment Terminal Service Provider (PTSP), Payment Solution Service Provider (PSSP), and Super Agent, enabling the company to provide POS, payment gateway, and agency banking services. The company also holds relevant Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) authorisation for communications-enabled value-added services.

As part of its growth roadmap, Redtech is working to expand its payment infrastructure capabilities across African markets, with a long-term ambition to support merchant collections and financial technology services in 29 African countries within the next year.

Adding his input, Mr Emmanuel Ojo, CEO of Redtech, said: “Redtech’s inclusion in the Financial Times Africa’s Fastest-Growing Companies ranking recognises the infrastructure we are building and the African businesses that rely on it every day. At Redtech, growth is not only about transaction value or market reach; it is tied to a belief that when African businesses have payment systems they can trust, they are better placed to trade, serve customers and expand with confidence.

“That is the Heirs Holdings Africapitalism philosophy in practice – private-sector execution building the rails for African prosperity. Our focus is on strengthening the infrastructure that allows businesses across the continent to collect, pay, and grow.”

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FCCPC, NAFDAC to Tackle Unsafe Products, Unfair Market Practices

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nafdac FCCPC

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) and the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aimed at closing regulatory gaps and strengthening enforcement against unsafe products and unfair market practices.

The agreement, signed in Abuja on Wednesday, is expected to deepen collaboration between both agencies in areas such as product safety, consumer protection, and enforcement of standards.

The deal also introduced a structured system for information exchange between both regulators, aimed at eliminating delays that often hinder investigations and enforcement.

Speaking at the event held at the commission’s corporate headquarters, the Executive Vice Chairman of FCCPC, Mr Tunji Bello, said the pact marks a deliberate step towards coordinated regulation in Nigeria’s consumer market.

He said, “This event marks a deliberate step towards strengthening collaboration in the service of Nigerian consumers, particularly in areas where product safety and consumer protection overlap and require coordinated action.

“The mandates of the FCCPC and the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control NAFDAC, are clearly set out in law, although their functions increasingly overlap in practice.”

Mr Bello explained that while both agencies have distinct legal mandates, their responsibilities increasingly intersect in practice, especially in dealing with substandard goods, unsafe pharmaceuticals, and misleading product claims.

According to him, “FCCPC focuses on protecting consumers from unfair, deceptive, or exploitative market behaviour. It also promotes competition, investigates complaints, and enforces remedies where consumer welfare has been undermined. NAFDAC’s responsibilities are more product-specific.

“It regulates the manufacture, importation, distribution, advertisement, and use of food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, chemicals, and packaged water. Its central concern is safety and quality, ensuring that regulated products meet required standards both before and after they enter the market.”

Mr Bello acknowledged that their regulatory functions increasingly overlap in practice, particularly in areas affecting both product safety and consumer rights.

He noted that issues such as misleading product claims, substandard goods, unsafe pharmaceuticals, and deceptive advertising often cut across the mandates of both agencies, requiring coordinated intervention.

He further explained that a harmful product in the market is not only a public health concern under NAFDAC’s jurisdiction, but also a consumer protection issue that falls within the enforcement scope of the FCCPC.

Similarly, cases involving false or misleading advertising of regulated products typically demand joint action from both institutions.

Against this backdrop, the agencies said the newly signed MoU provides a structured framework to address these overlaps, enabling more effective collaboration, clearer responsibilities, and improved regulatory outcomes.

The FCCPC boss stated, “In reality, the work of both agencies often converges. Issues such as misleading product claims, substandard goods, unsafe pharmaceuticals, and deceptive advertising raise questions that fall within both product safety and consumer protection. For instance, a harmful product that reaches the market is not only a public health concern under NAFDAC’s remit, but also a consumer protection issue for FCCPC.

“The same applies to false advertising of regulated products, which typically requires input from both bodies. Given this overlap, a formal Memorandum of Understanding provides a practical basis for cooperation. The MoU being executed today, therefore, establishes a clearer and more workable framework for collaboration between the two institutions.”

He added that the new framework would eliminate confusion for consumers and improve response time to complaints.

“Rather than leaving consumers to decide which agency to approach, complaints can now be received and reviewed in one place, and then directed through clearly defined channels. This will make the system more efficient and more responsive,” Mr Bello said.

The FCCPC boss also disclosed that the agreement provides for data sharing, joint investigations, and coordinated enforcement actions, as well as capacity building through training and technical collaboration.

He stressed that the ultimate goal is to build trust in the market.

“Effective regulation is not just about enforcement. It builds confidence. When consumers trust that products are safe and their rights are protected, markets function more efficiently,” he added.

In a stern warning to violators, Mr Bello said the collaboration would strengthen oversight and deter non-compliance.

“This will send shivers down the spine of those who are mischievous in our society, those who try to circumvent the rules. The message is clear: enforcement will be stronger and more coordinated,” he said.

On her part, the Director-General of NAFDAC, Mrs Mojisola Adeyeye, described the agreement as critical to protecting Nigerians from harmful products and ensuring that consumer rights are upheld.

She said the partnership goes beyond documentation and must translate into action.

“This MoU is extremely important for the nation. But beyond the document, what matters is action. We do not need theory when it comes to consumer protection; we need results,” she said.

Mrs Adeyeye recounted instances where FCCPC responded swiftly to complaints she personally raised as a consumer, leading to immediate corrective actions by erring businesses.

“The two times that I complained, he responded almost immediately, and the enterprise made amends. That is the way it is supposed to be. That is the kind of leadership we need,” she said.

She emphasised that while NAFDAC ensures product safety and quality, FCCPC plays a critical role in protecting the rights of consumers who use those products.

“NAFDAC is about the safety and efficacy of products, but it is people who use those products. That is where FCCPC comes in. Consumers have the right to complain, and we must ensure those complaints lead to action,” she added.

The NAFDAC boss further noted that the collaboration would strengthen enforcement tools, including sanctions against violators, while enhancing public awareness through coordinated communication.

She said, “NAFDAC has the mandate to act against violators, FCCPC will fight for the consumer, and together we will ensure that Nigerians are protected. For the people who are watching us. Because this will be televised, just know that you are on our minds.

“In terms of product quality, safety and efficacy. In terms of your rights as a consumer to complain. We are watching your back.”

The MoU is expected to streamline complaint handling, improve regulatory coordination, and ensure faster resolution of consumer issues, while also creating a more predictable compliance environment for businesses.

The move comes at a time when Nigeria is battling the proliferation of substandard products, fake drugs, and deceptive advertising, all of which have continued to undermine consumer confidence and public health.

With both agencies now working under a unified framework, stakeholders say the success of the agreement will depend on sustained implementation and consistent enforcement.

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Lagos, Abuja Courts Order Return of Airtime, Data Lending Services

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data and airtime loan services

By Adedapo Adesanya

Two divisions of the Federal High Court have issued interim injunctions restoring airtime lending services and restraining the enforcement of the contentious regulations introduced by the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC).

FCCPC introduced the controversial Digital, Electronic, Online or Non-Traditional (DEON) Consumer Lending Regulations in 2025, prompting legal actions by telecom firms.

The rulings, delivered in Lagos and Abuja, restored the data and airtime loan services, relied upon by millions of Nigerians.

In Lagos, Justice Ambrose Lewis-Allagoa, on April 15, 2026, granted four interim injunctions in suit marked FHC/L/CS/760/2026, filed by the Wireless Application Service Providers Association of Nigeria (WASPA) against FCCPC.

The court restrained the commission, its officers and agents from enforcing the DEON Regulations, including several key provisions of the framework.

It further barred the FCCPC from interfering with the operations of WASPA members, imposing sanctions or fines for alleged non-compliance, or issuing directives connected to the enforcement of the regulations and adjourned to April 17, 2026, for further hearing.

Relatedly, the Federal High Court in Abuja on April 24, 2026, granted an interim order in suit marked FHC/ABJ/CS/779/2026 following an ex parte application by Nairtime Holdings Limited and Nairtime Nigeria Limited against MTN Nigeria Communications Plc and Airtel Networks Limited.

The court restrained both telecom operators, their officers and agents from suspending, restricting or otherwise interfering with Nairtime Nigeria Limited’s access to their platforms, including short codes, Short Message Service (SMS), and Unstructured Supplementary Service (USSD).

The order applies for the duration of Nairtime’s valid licence issued by NCC and prevents the operators from relying on the FCCPC regulations as a basis for any disruption.

The applicants had argued that the planned suspension of services was based on a directive linked to the DEON Regulations, despite their compliance with contractual obligations and the absence of any established breach or required notice.

The court found sufficient grounds to grant interim relief pending the determination of the substantive suit.

Taken together, the two rulings effectively place the enforcement of the DEON Regulations on hold, creating a temporary legal framework that allows airtime lending and related services to continue.

The FCCPC is restrained from acting against VAS providers, while telecom operators are prevented from using the regulations to deny licensed operators access to their networks.

The DEON Regulations, introduced by the FCCPC in July 2025, were designed to extend regulatory oversight to unsecured digital lending, including airtime and data credit services.

However, the move triggered strong opposition from industry stakeholders, particularly the Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), which argued that the regulations encroached on the NCC’s statutory mandate, created overlapping compliance obligations, and conflicted with an existing memorandum of understanding between the regulators.

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