Nigeria
Phone Code
+234
Capital
Abuja
Population
220 Million
Native Name
Nigeria
Region
Africa
Western Africa
Timezone
West Africa Time
UTC+01:00
On This Page
Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa (over 220 million people, projected to be the world's third most populous by 2050) and the continent's largest economy. The country sits on the Gulf of Guinea in West Africa with land borders to Benin, Niger, Chad and Cameroon, and a long Atlantic coastline running from the Lagos lagoon system in the south-west to the Cross River delta in the south-east. Nigeria is a federal republic of thirty-six states and a Federal Capital Territory; the planned modernist capital Abuja, completed in 1991 to replace Lagos as the seat of government, sits in the geographic centre of the country, while Lagos remains the commercial pole, Africa's largest urban agglomeration and one of the great megacities of the world. Nigeria is a remarkably plural society — Hausa-Fulani in the north, Yoruba in the south-west, Igbo in the south-east, Edo, Ijaw, Tiv, Efik and several hundred other ethnic groups, with over five hundred languages — and English is the official language alongside the very widely spoken Nigerian Pidgin. Nigeria is the global home of the Nollywood film industry (the world's second-largest by output), the Afrobeats music scene that has carried Burna Boy, Wizkid, Davido, Tems and Asake to global charts, the Booker-winning literature of Wole Soyinka (Africa's first Nobel laureate in Literature, 1986), Chinua Achebe, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Ben Okri and Helon Habila, and the largest economy of West Africa around oil and gas (Niger Delta), agriculture, fintech and entertainment. Visitors come for Lagos itself — Victoria Island, Lekki, the Nike Art Gallery, the Tarkwa Bay beach community and the Eyo and Lagos Carnival festival weeks — for the modern monuments and embassies of Abuja, for the Calabar Carnival in Cross River State (Africa's largest street carnival, every December), the UNESCO-listed Osun-Osogbo Sacred Grove, the Sukur Cultural Landscape (UNESCO), Olumo Rock at Abeokuta, Yankari National Park's wildlife and warm springs, and the Obudu Mountain Resort plateau on the Cameroon border. The visa system runs on the e-Visa portal launched in 2019 and on a Visa-on-Arrival route for ECOWAS nationals and a list of approved nationalities, and the yellow-fever vaccination certificate is mandatory at entry.
Nigeria visa system overview
Nigeria requires visas for most foreign nationalities, with the e-Visa portal at visa.immigration.gov.ng (operated by the Nigeria Immigration Service) as the standard online route for tourism and short business meetings, and a Visa-on-Arrival pathway available to ECOWAS citizens and to a published list of nationalities under prior online approval. The e-Visa is filed online with passport scan, photograph, return ticket, hotel booking, the visa fee (around USD 160 for most categories) and a valid yellow-fever vaccination certificate; processing typically takes about a week. Visa-on-Arrival is granted at Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos and Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja against a pre-issued approval letter — turning up without the prior approval is not the route, and the approval must be confirmed before the carrier will board. ECOWAS citizens (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo) move under the regional free-movement protocol with reduced documentation. Travellers who cannot use the e-Visa or who need work, study or long-stay categories file at the Nigerian embassy or High Commission covering their place of residence; standard documentation includes the application form, passport with at least six months' validity beyond the intended stay and at least two blank pages, photographs, return ticket, accommodation evidence, the yellow-fever certificate, the visa fee and any category-specific letters or sponsorship. The yellow-fever certificate is mandatory and is checked on arrival — without it, entry is refused. Long-stay categories include the Subject-To-Regularization (STR) Visa for new expatriate hires (regularised to the Combined Expatriate Residence Permit and Aliens Card, CERPAC, after arrival), the Temporary Work Permit (TWP) for shorter assignments, the Student Visa for institutions registered with the National Universities Commission, and family-reunification residence categories. Lagos remains the main international gateway alongside Abuja and the Port Harcourt and Kano international airports.
Common Visa Types
Tourism & Business e-Visa
The standard online route for tourism, family visits, conferences, contract negotiations and short business meetings, filed at visa.immigration.gov.ng (the Nigeria Immigration Service portal) before travel. Documentation: passport scan with at least six months' validity and two blank pages, recent passport-style photograph, return or onward ticket, hotel booking or sponsor's address, visa fee (around USD 160), valid yellow-fever vaccination certificate, and for business applicants a letter of invitation from the host company. Approval is delivered as a printable e-Visa to be presented at the airport.
Visa on Arrival (Pre-Approved)
Available at Lagos (MMA) and Abuja (NAIA) airports against a pre-issued approval letter from the Nigeria Immigration Service. Travellers apply online before flying, receive the Visa-on-Arrival approval (typically issued within a few business days), present it together with passport, return ticket, accommodation evidence and yellow-fever certificate at immigration on arrival, and pay the fee on the spot. Eligibility is published by the Nigeria Immigration Service and includes business travellers from approved countries, frequent visitors and emergency-medical cases. Without the prior approval, this route is not available.
ECOWAS Visa-Free Entry
Citizens of fellow ECOWAS member states (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo) enter visa-free under the ECOWAS regional free-movement protocol. Standard documentation at the border is a valid passport (or ECOWAS travel document), proof of onward travel and the yellow-fever vaccination certificate. Long stays beyond the regional protocol convert to a residence permit application in Nigeria.
Subject-To-Regularization (STR) Visa & CERPAC
The standard route for new expatriate professional hires by Nigerian-registered companies. The employer files the expatriate quota and STR application with the Ministry of Interior; the employee applies at the Nigerian embassy of residence with passport, qualifications, the offer letter, the company's expatriate-quota approval, references, photographs, the visa fee and the yellow-fever certificate. After arrival, the holder regularises the status to the Combined Expatriate Residence Permit and Aliens Card (CERPAC) within ninety days. Concentrated demand around oil and gas (Niger Delta, Lagos, Port Harcourt), telecoms, construction, banking and the international development sector.
Temporary Work Permit (TWP)
For short-term professional assignments — installation, training, equipment commissioning, audits, consultancy and similar specialist tasks not exceeding the published TWP duration. The Nigerian host company applies in advance to the Comptroller-General of Immigration; the approved TWP cable is sent to the Nigerian embassy or used at the airport at entry. Documentation: passport, photographs, the TWP cable reference, the contract, the host company's papers, the visa fee and the yellow-fever certificate.
Student Visa
For full-time studies at universities and recognised institutions registered with the National Universities Commission (NUC) — the University of Ibadan, the University of Lagos, Ahmadu Bello University, Obafemi Awolowo University, the University of Nigeria Nsukka, the American University of Nigeria in Yola, Covenant University and many others. The institution issues the admission letter; the student applies at the Nigerian embassy of residence with passport, admission letter, evidence of fee payment, financial means, photographs, the visa fee and the yellow-fever certificate. Spouses and minor children may follow on a dependant visa.
Practical information for Nigeria travel
Travel Guide
Nigeria rewards visitors who take the time to anchor a trip on Lagos and one or two of the regional cultural cores. Most international flights land at Murtala Muhammed International (MMA) in Lagos or Nnamdi Azikiwe International (NAIA) in Abuja; carriers from Europe include British Airways, Lufthansa (Frankfurt–Lagos direct), Air France (Paris-CDG–Lagos and Paris-CDG–Abuja), KLM, Turkish Airlines and Ethiopian, with regional connections from Addis Ababa, Nairobi, Johannesburg, Accra and Dakar carrying onward African traffic. Lagos itself is the headline city: Victoria Island and Ikoyi for hotels, restaurants and the gallery scene, Lekki for the modern beach-and-mall belt, the Nike Art Gallery (one of West Africa's largest contemporary-art collections), the National Museum on Awolowo Road, Tarkwa Bay (a quiet boat-only beach community across the Lagos harbour), Lekki Conservation Centre's canopy walk, and the Eyo masquerade festival on Lagos Island. Abuja is the modernist federal capital — the Aso Rock and the National Mosque and Christian Centre framing the central axis, the Nigerian National Mosque and the Millennium Park, the Zuma Rock monolith on the Kaduna road, Jabi Lake and the Wonderland leisure cluster. The Yoruba heartland of the south-west holds Ife (the historic spiritual centre of the Yoruba), Abeokuta with the dramatic Olumo Rock and the Ogun River, and the UNESCO-listed Osun-Osogbo Sacred Grove with its Susanne Wenger sculptural garden and the annual August festival. The Cross River State on the Cameroon border carries the Calabar Carnival — Africa's largest street carnival, building through December and culminating in the December 27 to 31 parade — together with the Tinapa free-trade resort, the colonial-architecture old town of Calabar and the cool Obudu Mountain Resort plateau in the Sankwala Mountains. The eastern Igbo heartland around Enugu, Onitsha and Owerri pairs with the Igbo-Ukwu archaeological site and the National War Museum at Umuahia. Yankari National Park in Bauchi state is the country's headline wildlife destination — elephants, baboons, hippos and the Wikki Warm Springs — and the Sukur Cultural Landscape in Adamawa state is the second of Nigeria's UNESCO World Heritage sites, an unbroken pre-colonial cultural landscape on a Mandara-massif plateau. Nigeria is a culture-and-energy destination first and a wildlife destination second; the country reads visibly through its food (jollof rice, suya, egusi, pepper soup, akara), its Afrobeats and highlife music, its Nollywood industry and its very large diaspora networks across Europe and the Americas.
Ways to Experience This Destination
Africa's largest city is a spread of islands and mainland districts around the Lagos lagoon. Victoria Island and Ikoyi hold the international hotel and restaurant cluster, the diplomatic district and the Nike Art Gallery, one of West Africa's largest contemporary-art collections; the Lekki peninsula is the modern coastal belt with the Lekki Conservation Centre's 401-metre canopy walk (one of the longest in Africa), the Lekki Arts & Crafts Market for handmade textiles and adire indigo cloth, and the long Atlantic beach line that includes Elegushi and Eleko. Lagos Island holds the National Museum on Awolowo Road, the Brazilian-Quarter colonial architecture along Tinubu Square and the Idumota market crowd. Tarkwa Bay across the harbour is a quiet boat-access fishing community with calm-water swimming. The Eyo masquerade festival, when granted, fills Lagos Island in spectacular white-robed processions; the Felabration week each October at the New Afrika Shrine in Ikeja celebrates the music and legacy of Fela Kuti.
Abuja was designed from scratch as the federal capital and inaugurated in 1991. The Three Arms Zone holds the Presidential Villa at the foot of Aso Rock, the National Assembly and the Supreme Court along a single ceremonial axis; the National Mosque and the National Christian Centre face each other across that axis as a deliberate symbolic statement of the country's two largest religious communities. The Millennium Park is the city's largest green space, the Jabi Lake and the Wonderland leisure park sit at the western end, and the Nike Art Centre Abuja (the federal capital branch) and the Thought Pyramid Art Centre frame the contemporary-art scene. Out of the city, the Zuma Rock monolith on the Kaduna highway is one of Nigeria's most photographed natural landmarks, and the Gurara Falls in Niger State are an easy day-trip on the way to Minna. The Aso Rock and Mpape Crushed Rock viewpoints give the modernist city its full skyline.
Calabar in Cross River State on the Cameroon border is one of Nigeria's most rewarding city stops and the headquarters of Africa's largest street carnival. The Carnival Calabar runs through December, with the headline parade on 27–31 December — costumed bands, Afrobeats and highlife music, and a city programme that fills hotels months ahead. The colonial old town along Marina Road carries the Slave History Museum at the Old Residency Building (a serious thematic UNESCO Memory-of-the-World context) and the Tinapa free-trade resort just outside the city. Out of Calabar, the Obudu Mountain Resort plateau in the Sankwala Mountains rises to about 1 700 metres above sea level, with cool air, the longest cable-car system in West Africa and a horse-riding and golf cluster. The Cross River National Park around Okwangwo and Oban holds one of West Africa's largest remaining contiguous rainforests with critically endangered Cross River gorillas and chimpanzees on the Cameroon border.
The south-western Yoruba heartland holds the country's deepest layer of traditional culture. Ile-Ife in Osun State is the historic spiritual centre of the Yoruba — the Ife Museum holds the world-famous Ife bronze and terracotta heads, considered among the finest royal portraits in West African art history. The UNESCO-listed Osun-Osogbo Sacred Grove on the bank of the Osun river is the country's headline cultural-religious site, with the modernist sculptural garden built by the Austrian-born artist-priestess Susanne Wenger from the late 1950s; the annual Osun-Osogbo Festival in August culminates in the procession of the Arugba carrying offerings to the river. Abeokuta in Ogun State holds the dramatic Olumo Rock granite outcrop, climbed by metal staircases to a panoramic city view, and the Adire Centre for traditional indigo-resist textile-dyeing. Ibadan further east holds the University of Ibadan (Nigeria's oldest, 1948), the Cocoa House skyscraper and the Mapo Hall colonial-era civic centre.
Yankari National Park in Bauchi State is Nigeria's flagship wildlife destination — elephants, baboons, patas and tantalus monkeys, hippos, crocodiles, hartebeest and several hundred bird species across savannah and woodland habitats, with the headline Wikki Warm Springs (a clear blue-green spring at constant 31°C, swimmable around the clock) at the heart of the park. Game drives leave from the central Wikki Camp twice daily. The Sukur Cultural Landscape in Adamawa State is Nigeria's second UNESCO World Heritage site and one of the most intact pre-colonial cultural landscapes in West Africa — terraced fields, ceremonial paved avenues and the surviving palace of the Hidi (chief) of Sukur on a Mandara-massif plateau. The Gashaka-Gumti National Park in Taraba State is the country's largest reserve, and the Cross River National Park (already mentioned in the Calabar entry) is the south-eastern rainforest twin. Nigeria is not a Big-Five safari destination on the East/Southern African pattern; visitors come here for the cultural-landscape and birding density rather than for game volume.
The Igbo south-east is one of the country's most distinctive regional cultures and runs from Enugu on the Niger plateau down to Owerri, Aba and the Atlantic coast at Port Harcourt and Calabar. Enugu, the regional capital, holds the Coal Camp colonial-industrial heritage (Nigerian coal mining ran from Udi from 1916), the Awhum Waterfall and Cave outside the city and the Ngwo Pine Forest. Onitsha on the Niger river holds Africa's largest open-air market and the Niger Bridge crossing into Asaba. The Igbo-Ukwu archaeological site in Anambra State produced one of the most important early West African bronze-casting finds (9th–10th century AD bronze ceremonial vessels of strikingly sophisticated design) and the National War Museum at Umuahia is one of the regional museums. Abia State holds the Long Juju of Arochukwu shrine cave system. The eastern coast reaches the Niger Delta — Port Harcourt for the river-and-mangrove cultural circuit, the Bonny Island offshore industrial-heritage cluster and the river-village transport networks of the Delta.
Nigeria is the global home of Nollywood and of Afrobeats, and a creative-industries trip can anchor a Lagos visit. Nollywood produces around 2 500 films a year (the world's second-largest film industry by output, after India's Bollywood) — much of it in Lagos and Asaba — and several production studios in Lekki and the Lagos Film Village offer visitor tours by appointment. Afrobeats grew out of the Lagos club scene and the New Afrika Shrine that Femi Kuti runs in Ikeja in honour of his father Fela Kuti; Burna Boy, Wizkid, Davido, Tems, Asake and Rema headline the global crossover. Felabration each October fills the Shrine for a week of legacy concerts. The Lagos Theatre Festival (February–March), the Lagos Photo Festival (October–November), the Ake Arts and Book Festival (Lagos, October–November) and the Lagos International Jazz Festival are the structural fixtures of the year. Nollywood and Afrobeats are also accessible from outside Nigeria — they are Nigeria's strongest cultural exports and shape the city in a way that is visible on a short visit.
Money & Currency
Nigerian Naira (NGN)
Currency code: NGN
Practical Money Tips
Naira (NGN) — exchange USD or EUR at licensed Bureau de Change (BDC) operators in Lagos, Abuja, and major cities for the best rates; banks (GTBank, Access Bank, First Bank, Zenith Bank, UBA) also exchange at official rates; bring crisp USD 100 bills for best rates; GBP, EUR, and AUD are exchangeable
Nigeria uses the Nigerian Naira (NGN). The most favourable rates for USD and EUR are available at licensed Bureau de Change (BDC) operators in Murtala Muhammed International Airport (Lagos), Abuja airport, and in commercial areas of Lagos (Victoria Island, Ikeja) and Abuja (Wuse II, Central Business District). Major banks (GTBank, Access Bank, First Bank, Zenith Bank, UBA) exchange currency at official rates. Bring crisp, new USD 100 bills in good condition — old or damaged notes are often refused or given worse rates. EUR and GBP are also exchangeable. CHF, AUD, and CAD are exchangeable at some city branches and airport desks. Always use licensed operators and keep exchange receipts.
ATMs widespread in Lagos and Abuja — GTBank, Access Bank, First Bank, Zenith Bank, and UBA ATMs accept Visa and Mastercard; availability in Port Harcourt, Ibadan, Kano; rural areas have very limited coverage; Naira shortages can occur at ATMs; withdraw during banking hours
ATMs are widely available in Lagos (Victoria Island, Lekki, Ikeja), Abuja (CBD, Wuse II, Maitama), Port Harcourt, Ibadan, Kano, and other major cities. GTBank, Access Bank, Zenith Bank, and First Bank ATMs have the most consistent international card acceptance for Visa and Mastercard. Naira cash shortages have historically caused ATM supply issues — if one ATM is empty, try nearby branches. Wise and Revolut work at Nigerian ATMs but fees can be high. Daily withdrawal limits apply (typically NGN 20,000–100,000 per card). Withdraw during banking hours for security and better availability.
Card acceptance growing in Lagos and Abuja — upscale hotels, restaurants, supermarkets (Shoprite, Game), and larger malls accept Visa and Mastercard; Apple Pay not widely supported; Google Pay not available; mobile money (Opay, Kuda, Palmpay, GTBank app) dominant for locals
Card acceptance for international Visa and Mastercard is growing in Lagos (Victoria Island, Lekki), Abuja (Wuse II, Maitama), and Port Harcourt at upscale hotels, restaurants, and major supermarket chains (Shoprite, Game, Park 'n' Shop). Apple Pay is not widely supported. Google Pay is not available. Nigerian mobile money services (Opay, Kuda Bank, Palmpay, Moniepoint) are extremely popular among locals but require a Nigerian bank account/SIM. GTBank, Access Bank mobile apps are widely used for interbank transfers (NIP transfers, USSD banking). For tourists, a physical Visa or Mastercard is the most practical card. Cash (NGN) is essential outside major city commercial areas.
Prices vary widely: budget hotel Lagos/Abuja NGN 15,000–40,000/night (USD 10–27); mid-range hotel USD 60–150; local restaurant (bukas) NGN 1,500–4,000; Suya skewers NGN 500–2,000; Uber Lagos to Victoria Island NGN 3,000–8,000; Lagos–Abuja flight NGN 50,000–120,000
Nigeria has a wide price range depending on location and establishment type. Budget hotel (Lagos/Abuja): NGN 15,000–40,000/night (approx. USD 10–27). Mid-range hotel: USD 60–150. Business hotel (Lagos Victoria Island, Abuja): USD 150–350+. Local restaurant (buka or canteen): NGN 1,500–4,000 for a full meal. Suya (beef skewers) from a street vendor: NGN 500–2,000. Fresh fruit juice: NGN 500–1,000. Lagos–Abuja domestic flight: NGN 50,000–120,000 (Air Peace, Ibom Air). Uber Lagos airport to Victoria Island: NGN 3,000–8,000 depending on traffic. Local bus (danfo): NGN 100–500. Exchange rate approximate: 1 USD ≈ 1,500–1,600 NGN (official rate, subject to change).
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
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