The Alternative Bank has unveiled AltInstitute, an education platform built to expand financial literacy across Nigeria and make non-interest finance accessible to students, professionals, and entrepreneurs.
Built as a certification and mentorship platform, AltInstitute introduces learners to the principles behind capital, ownership, risk-sharing, and long-term value.
The bank in a statement made available on Tuesday, explained the platform was designed to address a clear market gap, where non-interest finance is often misunderstood or reduced to outdated assumptions rather than an asset-backed model built around shared risk and real economic activity.
It said by combining local mastery with global environmental, social, and governance (ESG) standards, AltInstitute moves ethical finance from specialist language into practical knowledge
people can use it to make better financial decisions.
“People cannot use what they do not understand,” said Maurice Igugu, Chief Marketing Officer, The Alternative Bank. “AltInstitute gives learners the language and confidence to understand finance beyond interest, debt, and guesswork. We are removing the confusion to show that non-interest, asset-backed finance is a practical model for people who want clearer choices around money, ownership, and risk. By credentialing the market and investing in human capital, we are ensuring that the next generation of professionals has the knowledge they need to make better financial decisions and create wealth.”
According to the bank, the platform’s foundational level, known as The Library, is currently live as a zero- barrier, free entry point at www.altbank.ng/institute. Noting that it delivers practical, visual, and focused education through formats built for how people learn today, including short-form video modules, infographics, and deep-dive articles.
Through these formats, it stated that learners can explore the core principles of ethical wealth, home financing, certainty, and equipment leasing without dense academic language.
“Participants will also learn how key non-interest instruments work, such as Sukuk, Takaful, and partnership-based finance,” the bank added.
It said the curriculum was specifically designed to provide a real professional edge as technology changes how work and finance operate, demonstrating how asset-backed certainty and risk-sharing contracts offer alternatives built around assets, certainty, and shared risk.
“By framing these concepts around real-world applications, AltInstitute ensures that ethical finance is taught as a forward-looking tool for personal and business growth.
“As learners progress through the foundational materials, they are encouraged to validate what they have learned. Following short knowledge checks and focused assessments, learners who pass receive a digital Foundation Badge to signal their achievement to employers, peers, and professional networks.
“This credentialing aspect not only rewards intellectual curiosity but also equips the next generation of Nigerian professionals with a visible proof of learning in the growing field of ethical
Finance,” it said.




