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Carbon, FairMoney, or Renmoney: Best Solar Loans in Nigeria

March 2026·7 min read

The biggest barrier to solar in Nigeria isn't technology or availability — it's upfront cost. A decent 3.5kVA system costs ₦700,000–₦1,000,000. Most middle-class Nigerian families don't have that sitting in a savings account. The good news: the financing options have improved significantly.

Option 1: Fintech personal loans (Carbon, FairMoney, Renmoney)

These platforms offer instant personal loans with no collateral — just your BVN, employment details, and sometimes a salary account. Rates are high but access is fast.

Carbon (formerly Paylater)

Rate

2–5% monthly

Limit

Up to ₦2,000,000

Term

3–12 months

Pros: Instant approval, clean app, flexible repayment

Cons: High interest rate; not specifically for solar

FairMoney

Rate

2.5–4.5% monthly

Limit

Up to ₦1,500,000

Term

3–18 months

Pros: Quick disbursement, good for salaried earners

Cons: Shorter terms mean higher monthly payments

Renmoney

Rate

2–3.5% monthly

Limit

Up to ₦6,000,000

Term

3–24 months

Pros: Higher loan amounts, longer terms, lower rates than others

Cons: Stricter qualification, slower approval

Option 2: Solar-specific PAYG (Pay-As-You-Go) schemes

These companies install the system and you pay monthly — like a utility bill. When you've paid the total cost, you own the system outright. The panel stays, the meter goes.

Providers operating in Nigeria include Arnergy Solar, Rensource, and d.light. Monthly payments typically start at ₦15,000–₦50,000 depending on system size. The downside: you don't choose your installer, so you get whatever system they've standardized on.

PAYG caveat: You're locked into their ecosystem. If the company folds, your system support could disappear. Stick to established providers with proven track records.

Option 3: Bank loans

Several Nigerian banks offer specific solar loans at lower rates than fintech:

  • Access Bank Solar Loan: ~2% monthly, up to ₦3M, 12–36 months
  • GTBank Energy Loan: Competitive rates for salaried GTBank customers
  • Stanbic IBTC Solar Loan: Good rates for employed individuals

Bank loans are cheaper but slower — expect 2–4 weeks for approval vs same-day for fintech. Worth it if you can wait.

Option 4: Installer payment plans

Many verified builders on SolarBuilders.ng offer their own payment plans — typically 30–50% upfront, with the balance over 3–6 months. No interest, no paperwork. Just trust.

This only works with builders you trust and verify. Using the Nexprove Verified badge is your protection — these builders have been vetted and have reputations to protect.

Which option should I choose?

Your situationBest option
Need money in 24 hoursCarbon or FairMoney
Salaried employee, can wait 2 weeksBank loan (cheapest)
Want zero-hassle, no upfrontPAYG scheme
Trust your builder, good relationshipInstaller payment plan
Diaspora funding family back homePay builder directly (build relationship first)

Watch out for solar scams

If someone offers you solar with "zero upfront, unlimited payment plan" from an unknown company — run. Solar scams in Nigeria typically follow one of three patterns:

  • Collecting upfront payment then disappearing before installation
  • Installing underspec equipment (cheap batteries, fake brand panels)
  • Inflating system size recommendations to charge more

Our solution: only deal with builders who have been independently verified. The Nexprove badge on SolarBuilders.ng means we've done the vetting work for you.

Know your system size before you apply for a loan

Use our free calculator to get accurate cost estimates.

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