Overview for US expats
Africa’s demographic and commercial heavyweight: **Lagos** as the finance, tech, and media hub; **Abuja** as the planned federal capital; **Port Harcourt** and the **Niger Delta** tied to oil and gas; **Kano** and northern cities as historic trade centres. **Numbeo**-style Apr 2026 snapshots typically show **cost of living and rent well below the US composite** in naira terms for local baskets, while **private hospitals in Lagos and Abuja** serve expats who can pay cash—public facilities remain **stretched** outside flagship centres. **Grid reliability** varies by **DisCo**; **generator and inverter** culture, **diesel budgeting**, and **compound security** are mainstream expat planning topics. **Kidnapping for ransom**, **armed robbery**, **terrorism risk in parts of the north-east and north-west**, and **communal violence** in some states drive **US Level 3/4 regional advisories**—research **state-by-state** guidance, avoid night travel on many intercity routes, and use vetted drivers. **NIN** / **BVN** sequencing matters for SIMs and banking. **Right-hand traffic**; **ride-hailing** (Bolt, inDrive, Uber where available) supplements chaotic **danfo** buses and **okadas** (where not banned).
Lagos is the main commercial hub
NIS visas, CERPAC / STR employment routes, and FIRS steps are national Nigerian rules. We keep one country profile for Nigeria and a Lagos hub page for commercial context.
Lagos hub overview →Everyday life
- Healthcare quality (1–5)
- 1
- Cost of living (1–5, higher = more affordable)
- 6
- Safety (1–5)
- 2
- Ease of living in English (1–5)
- 4
Data points (where available)
- Numbeo cost of living index
- 27.4
- Safety index
- 38.2
- Healthcare index
- 51.8
Schooling for families (1–5)
- Early childhood
- 3
- Primary (elementary)
- 3
- Secondary (middle/high)
- 3
Why Nigeria works well for expats
- Numbeo Apr 2026-style snapshot: national cost-of-living index often in the **mid-20s to low-30s** vs US baseline ~100—strong purchasing-power upside for USD/EUR earners after tax, FX, and transfer costs
- English-official environment and deep **Nollywood**, **Afrobeats**, and **tech (Yabacon Valley)** energy for culturally curious expats
- Large **diaspora** links (UK, US, Canada) and established **oil, fintech, and NGO** professional networks in Lagos and Abuja
- Regional travel within **ECOWAS** with correct visas; beaches near Lagos, Calabar carnival culture, and highland/plateau climates (Jos) as contrasts
- Growing **fibre and 4G** in major metros; mobile money and fintech innovation (subject to **CBN** policy shifts)
Tradeoffs and challenges
- **travel.state.gov** often cites **crime, terrorism, civil unrest, kidnapping, and maritime piracy**—some states carry **Level 4: Do Not Travel** guidance; plan movements with security advice, not optimism
- **Traffic congestion** (Lagos), **informal transport**, and **road safety**; **cash-in-transit** and **checkpoint** culture require local orientation
- **Bureaucracy**, **document authentication**, and **processing delays** on permits; budget counsel for work and investment routes
- **Public schooling** quality uneven; **international-school** fees and waiting lists in Lagos/Abuja
- **Dual citizenship** rules are **restrictive for naturalised Nigerians** and have registration nuances for citizens by birth abroad—verify with counsel before assuming two passports
Visa routes for US citizens
other
Difficulty: medium
US passport holders generally need a **visa** before travel unless a **visa-on-arrival** or **e-visa** category applies to the specific purpose—**Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS)** rules, fees, and eligible ports of entry **change** with notices. Short visits for tourism or business are **not** authorisation to take up local employment or to reside indefinitely. Confirm current categories on **official NIS channels**, **US Embassy Abuja**, and **travel.state.gov** before booking.
work permit
Difficulty: hard
Employment-based **Combined Expatriate Residence Permit and Aliens Card (CERPAC)** / **STR visa** (Subject to Regularisation) and related routes are typically **employer-led**: quotas, expatriate positions, and compliance with **Ministry of Interior** / NIS procedures. Multinationals and oil-and-gas contractors routinely use immigration counsel; working on a visitor stamp carries **enforcement and deportation** risk.
entrepreneur
Difficulty: hard
Business presence ties to **CAC** company registration, **FIRS** tax identification, sector licences (e.g. finance, oil services, telecom), and an immigration basis that matches actual management activity—**not** a casual “register a company and live indefinitely” path. Capital thresholds and labels **change**; align corporate, tax, and NIS filings with bilingual counsel.
family reunification
Difficulty: medium
Dependant permits when a principal holds a qualifying **CERPAC** / residence category; marriage and birth certificates, police clearance, and medical checks are common. US civil documents generally need **apostille** and may require certified translation. Verify spouse and child rules on current NIS circulars.
other
Difficulty: medium
Study and research categories through recognised **federal and state universities** and research institutes—maintain enrolment and passport validity. **National Youth Service Corps (NYSC)** and local content rules can affect graduates and some hires—verify with institutions and counsel if relevant.
digital nomad
Difficulty: hard
Nigeria does **not** operate a standalone national **digital-nomad** or remote-worker visa with a single published income threshold comparable to Estonia or Croatia. Remote work paid by a foreign employer while holding only a short-stay visa is a **compliance grey area**—obtain an explicit permit basis through NIS / employer channels and **do not** assume tourist status covers full-time remote work.
retirement
Difficulty: hard
There is **no** simple passive-income retirement visa marketed like Panama’s Pensionado. Long-stay retirees usually need another qualifying permit basis or repeated lawful short visits—**not** a substitute for structured residence planning. Confirm with counsel before committing to multi-year retirement.
Example cities to explore
Lagos (Victoria Island, Ikoyi, Lekki corridor), Abuja (Maitama, Wuse, Gwarinpa), Port Harcourt, Kano, Ibadan, Enugu, Calabar, Murtala Muhammed International (LOS) / Nnamdi Azikiwe International (ABV)
References and further reading
- Nigeria Immigration Service
- Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS)
- National Identity Management Commission (NIMC)
- National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA)
- Central Bank of Nigeria
- Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC)
- US Embassy Abuja
- US State Department – Nigeria travel information
- EF English Proficiency Index
- Numbeo – Nigeria cost of living, safety, healthcare