The Nigeria Immigration Service was allocated the largest share of the Ministry of Interior's budget (₦618.7 billion), accounting for a dominant 55.8%

  • The Nigeria Immigration Service received the highest share — ₦618.7 billion (55.8%) — of the Interior Ministry’s 2025 budget.
  • This allocation emphasises border security and migration management as national priorities.
  • The NSCDC follows with ₦240.9 billion (21.7%), highlighting the government’s focus on civil protection and internal security.
  • The Nigeria Correctional Service received ₦184.6 billion (16.7%).
  • Other agencies, including the ministry headquarters, received ₦64.5 billion (5.8%).

The 2025 budget breakdown for Nigeria’s Ministry of Interior highlights a strong emphasis on border management and national security, with the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) receiving the largest allocation of ₦618.7 billion, representing 55.8% of the Ministry’s total budget.

This dominant share reflects the government’s focus on securing Nigeria’s borders, managing migration effectively, and strengthening identity management systems.

It also signals an increasing prioritisation of internal security structures amid growing cross-border movement and migration-related challenges.

Source:

Budget Office of the Federation, Nigeria

Period:

2025
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The Nigerian Army commands over half of Nigeria’s proposed 2026 defence budget, more than every other force combined
  • The Army has been allocated ₦1.50tn, more than half of the top-ten defence allocations, making it the backbone of Nigeria’s security spending.
  • The Navy (₦443.9bn) and Air Force (₦407.2bn) come next, but together they are far behind the Army.
  • Institutions like the Defence Intelligence Agency, Training and Doctrine Command, and Defence Missions receive meaningful but much smaller funding, reinforcing their support-role status.
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Finance, budget, and economic planning ministries command half of Nigeria’s 2026 top allocations
  • The Federal Ministry of Finance dominates with ₦16.78 trillion, accounting for nearly ₦1 in every ₦3 spent among the top ministries.
  • Combined, the ministries of Finance and Budget & Economic Planning control more than 50% of the listed allocations, underscoring the government’s focus on fiscal strategy and economic agenda.
  • The Works and Defence sectors rank third and fourth, reflecting continuous prioritisation of infrastructure development and national security.
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Presidential air fleet budget falls 15% after 2024 peak
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  • The change represents a 4.7% year-on-year reduction in funding.
  • Despite the decline, allocations remain broadly flat, with no major expansion in 2026.
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Debt Management Office (DMO) Nigeria received a whopping 92.23% of the $15.5tn allocation for the Federal Ministry of Finance’s MDAs
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The National Institute for Hospitality and Tourism received ₦8 billion, three times the budget of the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation
  • The Ministry of Art, Culture, Tourism and the Creative Economy allocated a total of ₦10.5 billion to its MDAs for the 2025 fiscal year.
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The National Commission for Museums and Monuments received the largest allocation (₦15 billion) among the ministry’s MDAs
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  • Institutions like the Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilisation, which promotes African identity, received ₦3.5 billion.

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