Nigeria’s Reserves Hit a 17-Year High of $51 Billion
NIGERIA · ECONOMY
Key Facts
—$51.04 billion: Nigeria’s external reserves reached the central bank’s full-year target on June 18, 2026, their highest level since 2009.
—Up 35% in a year: Reserves have climbed by $13.33 billion from $37.71 billion a year earlier.
—The naira still slipped: The currency weakened about 1% over the week to roughly 1,370 per dollar, despite the bigger buffer.
—Why it rose: Stronger oil earnings, steady remittances and returning foreign investors drove the gain, the central bank said.
—IMF caution: The Fund wants Abuja to slow its dollar buying so the naira can find its true value.
—Reform dividend: Three years of painful change, a floated currency and a scrapped fuel subsidy, are starting to show results.
Nigeria’s external reserves have hit a 17-year high of $51.04 billion, the central bank reports, giving Africa’s most populous nation its thickest financial cushion since 2009. The milestone suggests years of hard reform are paying off, even as the naira, the local currency, stubbornly refuses to strengthen.

What Nigeria’s external reserves milestone means
External reserves are the foreign-currency savings a central bank keeps to defend its currency and pay the country’s bills abroad. For Nigeria, that store reached $51.04 billion on June 18, 2026, hitting a target the Central Bank of Nigeria had set for the whole year.
The figure is up 35.35%, or $13.33 billion, from a year earlier. It is the highest level since 2009, according to data published on the bank’s website.
Why the buffer matters to outsiders
For foreign investors and importers, reserves are a confidence gauge. A bigger cushion lowers the risk of a sudden devaluation and reassures anyone holding or sending money into the country.
The central bank credited the build-up to stronger oil earnings, steady remittances from Nigerians working abroad, and a return of foreign portfolio money. Each of those flows had been scarce during the currency turmoil of recent years.
The puzzle: a fatter cushion, a softer naira
Yet the record reserves did not lift the currency. The naira slipped about 1% over the week to around 1,370 per dollar on the official market, even as the buffer grew.
On the street, the parallel rate held near 1,400, narrowing the gap with the official price to about 30 naira. Analysts pointed to thin market liquidity and fresh dollar demand from investors trimming stock positions.
The IMF’s warning
The International Monetary Fund has urged caution. It argues that piling up reserves too quickly may be holding the naira above its fair-market value.
The Fund recommends a slower pace of accumulation so the currency can drift toward a level the market sets on its own. It is a classic tension between building a safety buffer and letting prices clear.
What it means for everyday Nigerians
For households, the reserves story is more abstract than the price of bread or fuel. The reforms that rebuilt the buffer also pushed inflation sharply higher, and many Nigerians are still feeling the squeeze.
A steadier naira, though, helps tame imported inflation over time. It also lets businesses plan, price goods and pay foreign suppliers without scrambling for scarce dollars.
Remittances play a quiet but crucial role. The billions that Nigerians abroad send home each year have become a pillar of the country’s external accounts, alongside oil.
What to watch next
The biggest risk is the one Nigeria cannot control: the oil price. A sharp drop in crude would quickly drain the very earnings that filled the reserves.
Investors will also watch whether foreign portfolio money keeps flowing in, or rushes out at the first sign of trouble. So-called hot money can leave as fast as it arrives.
For now, the direction of travel is encouraging. A 17-year high in reserves gives Abuja room to absorb shocks that would have floored it just two years ago.
Three years of reform
The reserves are the clearest scoreboard yet for President Bola Tinubu’s overhaul. Since 2023 his government has floated the naira and removed a costly fuel subsidy, choices that fed painful inflation but were meant to rebuild credibility.
Muda Yusuf of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise said the steadier exchange rate, the firmer reserves and the recovery in capital inflows all point to those measures bearing fruit. The question now is whether the gains hold as global oil prices wobble.
Africa’s bellwether economy
Nigeria is Africa’s most populous nation and one of its largest economies, so its financial health colours how investors see the whole region. A stronger Nigeria tends to lift sentiment toward African frontier markets generally.
The reserves milestone lands as several African economies post firmer numbers at once. From Lagos to Nairobi, the story of 2026 has been one of cautious stabilisation after years of turbulence.
That backdrop helps explain why foreign money is trickling back. The test is whether the recovery proves durable enough to keep it.
Frequently Asked Questions
How big are Nigeria’s external reserves now?
They reached $51.04 billion on June 18, 2026, the central bank’s full-year target and the highest level since 2009.
Why did the reserves rise?
The central bank cited stronger oil earnings, steady remittances from Nigerians abroad and renewed foreign portfolio inflows.
Did the naira strengthen as reserves rose?
No. The naira slipped about 1% over the week to roughly 1,370 per dollar on the official market, even as the buffer grew.
What does the IMF recommend?
The IMF has urged Nigeria to slow its reserve accumulation so the naira can move closer to its fair-market value.
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