91大神

  • It鈥檚 Taken Us Three Years [and Counting] to Access My Late Aunt鈥檚 Pension

    What happens when a person dies without a will in Nigeria? The assumption usually is that the next of kin gets any assets the deceased leaves behind. That鈥檚 far from the truth. Ola has a first-hand experience of how frustrating and time-consuming it is to claim a deceased relative鈥檚 benefits. She鈥檚 been at it for three years, and from the look of things, it鈥檚 still a long road ahead.

    Written By:

    As told to Boluwatife

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    One of the worst things you can experience as a Nigerian is trying to access the funds of a relative who died without a legal will. 

    I speak from experience. 

    My aunt passed away in 2020, and we鈥檙e still struggling to access her pension.  It鈥檚 one reason I now advise anyone going for even the smallest medical procedure to get a probate-stamped document from a high court so someone else can access your money, at the very least.

    But back to our struggle.

    My aunt first became ill in 2017. She鈥檇 had a medical procedure which led to complications, leaving her bedridden and unable to feed without a stomach tube. She basically lived in the hospital for the three years that she was ill. And the bills? They ran into 鈧1.2m weekly.

    The illness took her job at a government parastatal, where she鈥檇 worked for 16 years. The government didn鈥檛 pay her hospital bills, and they made her resign after the first year. When the parastatal鈥檚 medical team visited and saw her condition, they decided they couldn鈥檛 keep paying someone who couldn鈥檛 work. The salary in question was just a little over 鈧100k/month.

    At my aunt鈥檚 place of work, you don鈥檛 just resign and go home. You have to submit clearance documents at several offices to update your employment status. I helped her husband with this clearance process 鈥 which took months. I thought that was stressful, until the real stress came.

    When she passed away in 2020, we assumed accessing her pension of almost 鈧6m would be straightforward. She and her husband kept no secrets; that鈥檚 how we knew about the pension in the first place. He also knew her passwords, and they even had joint properties.  But there was no will, and that was the problem. Although he was the next of kin, he couldn鈥檛 access the funds unless a court gave him a document called a Letter of Administration. That was the first hurdle.

    Getting a Letter of Administration in Nigeria can take as much as five years. You鈥檒l need to hire a lawyer, pay them 10% of whatever property you want to claim, and then try to survive the many court delays.

    You鈥檒l also need two administrators for court approval: a spouse and another family member. 

    So, I stood in with her husband, as they didn鈥檛 have children. Fortunately, we had a well-known lawyer who fast-tracked the process, and we got the Letter of Administration after one year.

    The next step was getting cleared to receive pension benefits from the government parastatal where my aunt worked. We had to provide pay slips, show evidence that she didn鈥檛 owe anything and meet several other requirements. At one point, we heard that the place where they kept some documents we needed for clearance got burnt. Again, we had people on the inside who helped fast-track the process, but even with that, it took another year to complete the clearance.

    The bank runs came next. 

    The deceased鈥檚 account had to be changed to an estate account, so the administrators (her husband and I) would be signatories and be able to access the funds in it. This was the account where the pension fund would go. It took another couple of weeks to update the account.

    With that done, we could now move to the pension fund administrator (PFA). But there was one thing standing in our way: The Nigerian government. 

    For individuals who work with private organisations, pension payment is straightforward. Your employer deducts the monthly pension from your salary and remits it to the PFA. For government workers, however, the pension is deducted from the salary but isn鈥檛 remitted to the PFA for years. So, you could have a pension account with a PFA, but there wouldn鈥檛 be money inside.

    That was what happened to my aunty. When we arrived at the PFA in March 2023, they told us that , the regulatory body for pensions in Nigeria, hadn鈥檛 remitted any pension fund to her account for the entire number of years she鈥檇 worked. The money was essentially in the air.

    The only thing the PFA could do was write PENCOM, requesting the funds so they could pay us. They also told us that the payment could take as much as three years to come in. Apparently, PENCOM gives preference to retirees over the family of deceased pensioners.

    At this point, we can only keep disturbing the PFA to send reminders to PENCOM. We鈥檝e spent so much money and time on this in the last three years, and it looks like we have one or two more years to go. I鈥檓 tired and have accepted the possibility that it might even take longer.

    I鈥檒l say it again: Please go to any high court and get a probate-stamped document, indicating who you want your money to go to if something happens to you. The last I checked, it cost about 鈧10k. Save your family the stress.


    We’re celebrating the Nigerian culture of meat and barbecue with Burning Ram on November 11. .


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