Planning to escape the economic hardships in Nigeria? Check out these 50 Visa-Free, Visa-On-Arrival Countries for Nigerians now.
If you are looking to Japa (local parlance for escape) from the current economic hardship in Nigeria and cool off in a different country without going through the rigorous process of securing a visa first?
Well, you are in luck, as there are about 50 countries, on different continents, you can visit with a Nigerian passport without securing a visa.
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These visa-free countries reduce your travel costs, eliminating the need to apply and pay for a visa or hire a travel agency solely for obtaining a visa.
With these visa-free countries, the only thing you need a travel agency for is to process your accommodation, car hire or sightseeing in your preferred destination.
NewsOnline Nigeria compiled these visa-free countries for Nigerians to save you time from surfing the whole of Google searching for the country that will allow you in without a visa.
Visa-free countries for Nigerians
- Cook Islands
- Dominica
- The Gambia
- Barbados
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Cote d’Ivoire
- Guinea-Bissau
- Senegal
- Haiti
- Burkina Faso
- Cape Verde
- Ghana
- Chad
- Benin
- Sierra Leone
- Togo
- Vanuatu
- Liberia
- Mali
- Niger
- Guinea
- Cameroon
- Montserrat
- Niue
- Fiji
25 visa-on-arrival countries for Nigerians
In case the visa-free countries are not suitable for you, don’t stress, as there are border gate visa countries you can travel to without first securing a visa until you arrive.
However, these nations require you to obtain a visa upon arrival in their countries, so you don’t have to submit yourself to a painstaking process of interviews in Nigeria just to obtain their visas.
Some countries have a visa-on-arrival system to ease foreigners’ travel process and make their nation the go-to for tourists or people seeking to migrate.
So, if you are ready to seek a new destination away from Nigeria, the following are visa-on-arrival countries you can visit.
- Seychelles
- Mauritius
- Bolivia
- Maldives
- Comoros
- Madagascar
- Uganda
- Djibouti
- Ethiopia
- Gabon
- Tuvalu
- Mauritania
- Iran
- Kenya
- Samoa
- Lebanon
- Suriname
- Malawi
- Somalia
- Mozambique
- Namibia
- Palau
- Rwanda
- Lesotho
- Timor-Leste
FAQ
What you need to know about visa-free countries
Visa-free application is based on the agreement between two countries. If Nigeria doesn’t have a visa-free agreement with a country, as a Nigerian citizen, you need to first secure the visa for your preferred destination.
That’s why countries like the United States, Canada, Britain and other Western countries are not on the list, as there’s no visa-free agreement between them and Nigeria.
What are the benefits of a visa-free?
- It eliminates the application process by an embassy or representing body.
- When you arrive at your destination, visa-free gets you off the queues at border control.
- Authorities do not necessarily demand confidential information.
- If you are a spontaneous person, then visa-free countries are right for you due to their little or no bottlenecks
- You don’t need a block account to support your travel to these countries
- You don’t have to submit letters of support from friends and employers or bank statements
Problem with visa-free application?
While visa-free countries ease your travelling process, they can also be costly for tourists, people travelling to the countries for business or in transit.
This is because some visa-free nations demand a high sum for every day you stay in their country in a bid to discourage travellers from residing there for too long.
Which country has the most visa-free or visa-on-arrival entry?
According to the Henley Passport Index, a Japanese passport can be used to enter 193 different countries and territories before securing a visa, making Japan the most powerful passport in the world in 2023.
Japan is followed by South Korea, as its passport holders can enter 192 countries on visa-free. The third place is occupied by German and Spanish passports, which allow holders to gain entrance to 190 countries.
Italian, Luxembourgish and Finnish passports took the fourth spot with 189 destinations, while passports from Sweden, Austria, Netherlands and Denmark allow 188 entries, making them the fifth most powerful passports.
In the sixth position are Britain, Portugal, France and Ireland, as holders of their passports get 187 visa-free destinations.
Surprisingly, the US passport falls behind them with only 186 visa-free destinations, while passports of Australian and Canadian jointly take the eighth spots as 185 countries allow holders of the nations’ passports to enter without a visa.