Put your
name on money
Claim a clean handle, get paid with it, and let people find you by name instead of by account number.
Turn your name into your pay tag.
Claim it, link where money should land, then share one clean tag people can trust.
One tag, many moments.
Claim it, share it, get paid with it, and show up the same way everywhere.
Type a handle. See identity instantly.
Type one name, get one clean recipient preview.
The tag is not just cute. It carries the signals people need before money moves.
Your handle can live on NairaTag, Telegram, and ENS.
Simple on the surface. Solid underneath.
Claim and share inside Telegram.
Claim a tag, look people up, open pay pages, and carry the same identity into Telegram.
Questions, answered.
The platform is designed to be simple: send money to a name, see identity instantly, and reduce wrong transfers. Here are the most common questions we get.
Legal pages: Terms, Privacy, and Name policy.
A handle is a simple payment name like ₦victor that resolves to a clear recipient preview (name + bank), so users can confirm who they are paying before sending money.
No. Protected names are not sold as open inventory. Government, regulatory, financial, brand, religious, and other sensitive identity namespaces stay out of the public premium marketplace and are only assigned after manual review and verification.
NairaTag checks the live Name Index before any claim. Public names can be claimed. Premium names are reviewed as paid inventory. Protected names are reserved for governments, regulated institutions, brands, and sensitive public or religious identities. Blocked names are never made available publicly. See the name policy for the full rule set.
Verification is designed to use identity signals like BVN checks, account name matching, and business verification so the UI can show clear badges where it matters: right before a payment is sent.
NairaTag has a direct handle resolver for recipient previews today, and it also supports an ENS path for crypto execution and public metadata. In the live model, a handle can map through an ENS subname like victor.nairatag.eth, while verified public metadata such as Telegram can be written to ENS text records like org.telegram.
The public consumer stack does not currently depend on a separate DNS resolver for everyday claims. The live public rails today are the NairaTag handle resolver, ENS subnames where configured, and ENS text records for linked public metadata. DNS-style partner routing is a separate integration surface, not the default public claim path.
Reserved names are not self-serve. Government bodies, regulated institutions, brands, and other protected entities are reviewed manually. NairaTag can require documentary proof such as incorporation records, official domains, trademark evidence, regulatory approvals, or delegated authority before a reserved name is assigned and verified.
Yes. The official Telegram bot can claim a handle, show your linked handle, look up people by handle or Telegram username, open pay pages, share receive links, and guide Telegram linking before you publish the alias to ENS from your wallet.
Handles are designed to be easy to type and share. Use 2-32 characters made up of letters, numbers, underscores, or periods. Examples: ₦mama_ijebu, ₦mikki, ₦fioso, ₦team.ng.
No. NairaTag is an identity layer. Money can still move through your bank, fintech, card processor, or crypto wallet. NairaTag adds a human-readable handle and policy-aware recipient verification before payment is confirmed.
Fintechs can resolve handles via API, display recipient verification, and route payment collection or payouts inside their own flows. The same namespace and policy layer also powers premium names, reserved names, and marketplace listings.
Own your name.
Claim a name people will remember, link where money should land, and make getting paid feel simple.