Nigeria’s real estate faces 2026 consolidation as costs, rates stay high — Report | Prestige Real Estate News


Nigeria’s real estate sector is heading into a consolidation phase as interest rates remain heavy, elevated construction costs persist, and limited access to structured finance continues to reshape developer activity.
This was disclosed in the Real Estate 2026 Outlook report by the Managing Director of Legendary Foreshore, Victor Ameh, which examined property market trends across Nigeria and Ghana.

The report noted that 2026 is expected to mark a defining shift for the sector, where weak project structures are increasingly exposed while well-capitalised developers gain an advantage in a tighter operating environment.
What the report is saying
The report stated that Nigeria’s real estate sector is entering a consolidation phase in 2026, driven by ongoing economic reforms but constrained by high interest rates, elevated capital costs, and tight financial conditions.
It noted that Nigeria’s $15 billion real estate market still has very low mortgage penetration.
As a result, most developments in both markets continue to rely on equity, short-term capital, and informal funding structures. While housing demand remains strong, the market is becoming more selective as weaker project structures struggle under financing pressure.
It added that although housing demand remains strong, the market is becoming more selective, with weaker project structures struggling under financing pressure.
“Nigeria is in a consolidation season. Reforms are reshaping the economy, but interest rates and capital cost remain heavy.”
“In Nigeria, 2026 will punish weak structures and reward operational excellence.”
The report further explained that only developers with strong capital structures, disciplined execution models, and realistic absorption strategies are expected to remain competitive in 2026. It noted that the sector is shifting away from speculative expansion toward more structured development planning.
More insights
The report highlighted that inflation and foreign exchange volatility continue to significantly increase construction costs across Nigeria’s real estate value chain.
Heavy reliance on imported building materials exposes developers to exchange rate fluctuations, which can quickly escalate project budgets and disrupt planning assumptions.
Developers are therefore adjusting their strategies to reduce exposure to cost volatility and execution risks.
Construction planning is increasingly shifting toward phased development models
Procurement strategies are becoming more cost-sensitive and tightly managed
Developers are adopting more efficient and lower-risk design approaches
Pricing strategies are being adjusted to reflect slower market absorption rates
It also noted that affordability pressures are reshaping demand in the residential and commercial segments, slowing sales cycles and increasing price sensitivity, particularly in mid-to-high-end housing.
What you should know
Nigeria’s real estate market is experiencing visible supply-side delays as developers respond to macroeconomic pressures and high financing costs. This is already affecting project pipelines, particularly in major urban centres like Lagos.
A third of hotel projects in Lagos have reportedly been placed on hold, slowing new supply in the hospitality segment. The Estate Intel 2025/2026 Lagos Real Estate Pipeline Report links delays to rising construction costs and financing constraints
Steel prices have surged sharply, with smaller rods rising by 210% over two years and larger rods increasing by 175%
The price of 10mm steel rods climbed from N335,000 per tonne in 2023 to N1,040,000 in 2025, significantly increasing project costs
In February 2026, the Central Bank of Nigeria reduced the benchmark interest rate to 26.5% from 27%, marking the only rate adjustment so far this year
These cost and financing pressures are forcing developers to adjust building plans, delay execution timelines, or restructure funding models to remain viable.
– Culled from Nairametrics



