🇳🇬 Universities in Nigeria
2 universities evaluated for international families.
Nigeria — Africa's most populous country and largest economy — is anchored by its first-generation federal universities, led by the University of Ibadan (UI, 1948, the 'premier university' that educated Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe) and the University of Lagos (UNILAG, 1962), set in the continent's commercial, banking, fintech and Nollywood capital. Both are English-medium with exceptional pan-Nigerian elite networks across government, medicine, law, business and letters. The honest context: chronic federal underfunding, recurrent nationwide ASUU lecturer strikes that have shut public universities for months at a time (including a roughly eight-month strike in 2022), overcrowding, infrastructure decay and a heavy brain-drain ('japa') outflow are real constraints, and global rankings sit modestly (QS ~#1001+). English-medium accessibility, very low tuition and a dominant domestic network are the draws. Best for Nigerian and West African students seeking the country's most prestigious degrees, or internationals wanting an affordable, English-medium degree plugged into Africa's biggest economy.
Post-Study Work
Student visa/residence permit sponsored by the institution; no automatic post-study work visa — many graduates emigrate ('japa') for opportunities abroad
Application System
Domestic via the JAMB UTME national exam plus each university's Post-UTME screening and WAEC/NECO results (English-medium); international applicants assessed on IB/A-Level/AP with equivalence
Avg. International Fees
Federal public tuition is very low for nationals (a few tens of thousands of naira/year); international self-sponsored fees ~USD 1,000–5,000/year by programme
| University | Network | Employability | Teaching | Curriculum | Institutional | Student |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Ibadan (UI) | A | B | B | B | C | B |
| University of Lagos (UNILAG) | A | B | B | B | C | B |