The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) launched its Self-Service Voter Registration Portal today, July 8. However, shortly after the announcement, Nigerians attempting to access the site found that it was not working.
The portal, hosted at cvr.inecnigeria.org, was designed to allow eligible Nigerians to begin voter registration from their smartphones. Under the new system, applicants complete the initial registration process online and then visit any INEC State or LGA office between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m., including weekends, for biometric capture.
The commission set July 26, 2026, as the registration deadline, giving applicants less than three weeks to complete the process.

The timing of the crash is particularly unfortunate. The portal launch was promoted aggressively on social media, including a widely shared graphic urging Nigerians to “start and finish your registration on your phone without visiting an INEC office.” The expectation that was created and the frustration when the site failed to deliver spread quickly online.
Complaints flooded X almost immediately after the announcement. “Self-registration is not active yet,” wrote @ImmanuelMiles. “The update for complete registration online is not yet showing. When should we expect it?” asked @PreshUgwueze. Others expressed broader anxiety about the system’s reliability, with one user simply asking: “Are our votes going to count?”

A tight deadline and a troubled start for INEC
The website failure on day one raises legitimate concerns given the compressed registration window. With the portal down and July 26 approaching fast, potential voters who cannot access the online system face a straightforward choice: wait and hope the site is restored, or visit a physical office directly.
As of the time of publication, the commission had not issued a public statement on the outage or given any indication of when the portal would be fully functional. Physical registration remains available at all INEC State and LGA offices during the stated hours, including weekends, as an alternative route for those who cannot wait for the online system to stabilise.

For INEC, the crash is an early credibility test for the commission’s digital ambitions ahead of the 2027 elections. The downloadable PVC system, announced recently by INEC Chairman Professor Joash Amupitan, is set to be piloted during the Osun governorship election on August 15. A portal that collapses on its first day does not inspire confidence in that roadmap.
Nigerians who wish to register can visit any of their State or LGA office directly. Once the portal is restored, the self-service process can be initiated at cvr.inecnigeria.org.
Similar read: INEC introduces downloadable replacement PVCs ahead of 2027 elections