Nigerian passport has staged a dramatic recovery on the global ranking, a move that has been described as a significant win for the country’s “shuttle diplomacy.”
With the improvement in the global ranking of the passport, as reported by the January 2026 Henley Passport Index, the green-backed travel document has climbed to 89th place, a sharp ascent from its historic low of 103rd recorded just five years ago.
“The shift marks the end of a decade-long slump and signals a turning point in Nigeria’s efforts to reintegrate into the global mobility elite.
The 2026 Turnaround
The rise from 103rd to 89th of the Nigerian passport was described as not just a statistical quirk, but representing a tangible expansion of travel freedom.
“For the first time in years, Nigerian citizens can now access 44 to 55 destinations (depending on the specific visa-on-arrival or e-visa category) without the traditional hurdles of embassy-stamped visas.
“While the jump is impressive, the data suggests a “recovery”, rather than a “conquest.” Analysts note that Nigeria is essentially regaining ground lost over 20 years of diplomatic stagnation.
Historical Context of The Nigerian Passport Ranking
2006: 62nd (Peak performance)
2021: 103rd (Historic low)
2025: 94th (Initial recovery)
2026: 89th (Current standing)
Nigerian Passport: The Climb?
The 14-place leap was attributed to three primary drivers, including:
Aggressive Visa Liberalisation: The Ministry of Interior’s focus on clearing passport backlogs and digitizing the application process has boosted international confidence.
Strategic Bilateral Ties: New reciprocal agreements with emerging economies in Asia and South America have opened doors that were previously bolted.
The “Slow Lane” Effect: While Nigeria added roughly nine new destinations to its visa-free score over the last decade, other nations stagnated, allowing the Nigerian passport to leapfrog them in the rankings.
The January 2026 Henley Passport Index stated that analysts opined that the jump to 89th is a signal to the world that Nigeria is open for business.
“However, the ‘mobility gap’ remains. While a Singaporean can visit 192 countries, a Nigerian still faces barriers in 75 per cent of the world,” it was stated.
The Global Landscape
Despite the improvement in the global rating of the Nigerian passport, the country is still within a challenging neighbourhood.
While Seychelles (24th) and South Africa (48th) lead the continent, the Nigerian passport remains among the bottom half of the global index.
2026 Global Comparison Table
1st – Singapore – 192 countries
10th – United States – 179 countries
80th – India – 55 countries
89th – Nigeria – 44-55 countries
101st – Afghanistan – 24 countries.
Interpretation: A Glass Half-Full
For the average Nigerian traveler, the “89th” position of the Nigerian passport is a psychological boost, but the practical reality of traveling to the UK, US, or Schengen area remains fraught with paperwork and high fees.
“The improvement is a “diplomatic green shoot”—a sign that the country’s reputation is mending, even if the destination list for spontaneous travel remains modest.
“To sustain this momentum, experts argue that Nigeria must continue to negotiate visa-on-arrival status with major trading partners and improve its internal security databases to ease the concerns of foreign immigration authorities,” it was added in the report.

























