Diaspora Real Estate in Nigeria — The 2026 Investment Guide
Nigeria's real estate market grew 12.4% in 2025 despite currency headwinds. For diaspora Nigerians earning in USD/GBP/EUR, the naira depreciation creates a rare buying opportunity — Lagos short-lets returning 18–22% net yield, Ilorin land appreciating 20%+ annually. But diaspora buyers lose money to bad title (Omo-Onile disputes), fake gazettes, and inflated prices. This guide is the honest playbook — vetted plots only.

1. Where diaspora investors actually make money
Not all Nigerian markets return the same yield. Here's the 2026 breakdown:
- Lagos (Lekki Phase 1, VI, Ikoyi): 12–18% net yield on short-lets; heavy competition.
- Lagos (Sangotedo, Abijo, Awoyaya): 15–22% yield; growth corridor.
- Abuja (Maitama, Asokoro, Wuse II): stable 10–14% long-let yield; low volatility.
- Ilorin (GRA, Tanke, Fate): 20%+ annual land appreciation; low entry price.
- Ibadan (Bodija, Ring Road): emerging market, 15–18% appreciation.
- Port Harcourt: infrastructure-dependent; higher risk, higher reward.
2. Documents you MUST verify before buying
The #1 diaspora scam is Omo-Onile / fake title. Verify these:
- Certificate of Occupancy (C of O) — issued by state government; primary evidence of title.
- Governor's Consent — required if property was ever transferred; without this, C of O is defective.
- Deed of Assignment — the contract of sale; must be registered.
- Survey Plan — approved by Office of Surveyor-General of the State.
- Excision & Gazette — for land in Lagos & Ogun: the plot must be excised from federal government acquisition.
- Charting information — verify at state Ministry of Lands.
3. The buying process (remote)
You do not need to visit Nigeria. Full remote workflow:
- Step 1: Afrinexa Global sends shortlisted properties + virtual tour.
- Step 2: We conduct on-ground due diligence (title, physical inspection, neighbourhood).
- Step 3: Lawyer's title search at Ministry of Lands (~₦150,000 fee).
- Step 4: Offer + negotiate; typical discount 5–15% from list.
- Step 5: 10% deposit paid to escrow (Afrinexa arranges) after title clearance.
- Step 6: Deed of Assignment executed via power of attorney (notarised at Nigerian embassy).
- Step 7: Full payment + registration at Ministry of Lands.
4. Realistic costs beyond the sale price
Budget an extra 15–25% for fees:
- Agency fee: 5% (buyer's side) or 10% (seller's side + your side).
- Legal fee: 5–10% of purchase price.
- Stamp duty: 1.5% of purchase price.
- Consent fee: 8% (Lagos), 4% (Abuja).
- Registration fee: 3%.
- Survey plan: ₦150,000–300,000.
- Physical planning permit (if building): 1–2% of construction cost.
5. Short-let vs long-let strategy
Choose based on management capacity:
- Short-let (Airbnb): 15–22% net yield in Lekki, but requires active management. Afrinexa offers full mgmt for 20% of gross revenue.
- Long-let (annual rental): 8–12% net yield; low management.
- Serviced apartments: hybrid model; 12–16% net yield; requires branding.
- Off-plan resale: buy at 40–50% below OMV, sell at completion for 30–60% return over 18 months.
6. Currency & remittance strategy
Naira volatility is the diaspora risk. Hedge it:
- Buy during naira weakness — USD deposits stretch further.
- Use dollar-domiciliary accounts (Zenith, GTB, UBA) to hold rent income.
- Avoid parallel-market exchange for large sums (₦100M+) — CBN scrutiny.
- Consider USD-denominated real estate funds (LADOL, RMB REITs) for smaller exposure.
How it works — step by step
Common questions
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