Under Sanwo-Olu, Lagos cut its external debt and more than doubled its domestic debt

Key takeaways:

  • Lagos cut external debt, but increased domestic debt.
  • The drop in external debt was meaningful, but the rise in domestic debt was much larger.
  • Stronger IGR gave Lagos more room to borrow and repay.
  • The state chose local funding over heavier dollar exposure.

Under Governor Sanwo-Olu, Lagos State’s external debt fell from $1.4 billion to $1.2 billion, a $247.2 million, or 17.4%, drop. But over the same stretch — between June 2019 and December 2025 — its domestic debt rose from about ₦479 billion to ₦1.2 trillion, an increase of ₦740.4 billion, or 155%.

External debt carries exchange-rate risk, which has become much heavier since the naira’s sharp repricing in 2023. Domestic borrowing, however, is easier to structure around local cash flows and state-level financing needs.

Lagos continued to pursue a very large infrastructure agenda. The state said its 2025 budget set aside ₦1.052 trillion for infrastructure, and in September 2025, it announced plans to raise ₦214.8 billion in bonds to fund 24 projects. The pattern shows that Lagos appears to have preferred local-currency funding for capital expansion, even as it trimmed dollar liabilities.

Source:

Debt Management Office

Period:

2019-2025
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