Where to Find Apartments in Lagos 2026: Complete Renter’s Guide
- Serviced apartments: ₦1M–₦1.5M/month in Lekki (monthly payments, all utilities included)
- Traditional lease: ₦600K–₦800K/month equivalent (annual payment, 5-10% agency fee)
- Best platforms: Privateproperty.ng, nigeriapropertycentre.com, propertypro.ng, Jiji.ng, Facebook expat groups
- Best neighborhoods: Lekki Phase 1 (for professionals), Phase 2 (for families), Ajah (for budget)
- Upfront cost: ₦7M–₦15M+ for traditional lease; ₦2M–₦4.5M for serviced
Finding an apartment in Lagos as a first-time renter is different from the West. What looks perfect in a photo can have hidden problems. The marketplace is fragmented across websites, agents, and Facebook groups. And landlords expect you to negotiate—but only if you know what to ask for.
This guide consolidates everything you need to know: where to search, what to expect, how much to budget, and what questions to ask before you sign.
Platforms to Find Apartments in Lagos
Online Platforms (Best for Comparison)
Privateproperty.ng
- Largest Nigerian property portal
- Filter by neighborhood, price, amenities
- Read agent reviews and property ratings
- Covers Lekki, VI, Ikoyi, Mainland
- Cost: Free to browse, agents handle negotiations
Nigeriapropertycentre.com
- Established platform with professional listings
- Good filter options for budget and location
- Agents are typically vetted
- Higher-end properties featured prominently
Propertypro.ng
- Growing platform with competitive listings
- Good for finding both agents and direct landlords
- User reviews on agents and properties
Jiji.ng (Classifieds)
- Fastest-moving platform (daily new listings)
- Mix of agents and direct landlords
- Negotiating room is higher here
- Best for budget hunting
Facebook Groups (Best for Direct Landlords & Expat Deals)
Join these groups to find direct landlord listings and get recommendations:
- “Housing in Lagos”
- “Expats in Lagos”
- “Lekki Accommodation”
- “Lagos Rentals”
Why Facebook groups?
- No agent commission (save 5-10% of annual rent)
- Direct negotiation with landlord
- Expats share honest reviews and warnings
- You can ask specific questions before applying
Real Estate Agents (Best for Vetting & Support)
Use agents when you want the process managed for you:
- Cost: 5-10% of annual rent (usually paid by landlord, sometimes negotiated with tenant)
- Advantage: They vet properties, handle negotiations, speed up process
- How to find trustworthy agents: Ask in Facebook expat groups, check reviews on Privateproperty, interview 2-3 before deciding
Neighborhoods & Cost
Where you choose to live determines your rent, commute, and lifestyle. Here’s a complete breakdown of what you’ll pay in each neighborhood:
| Neighborhood | 1-Bedroom (Annual Lease)* | Serviced Apt (Monthly) | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lekki Phase 1 | ₦500K–₦800K/month equiv | ₦1M–₦1.5M/month | Professionals, established expat community |
| Lekki Phase 2 | ₦400K–₦600K/month equiv | ₦1M–₦1.2M/month | Families, newer infrastructure |
| Ajah | ₦350K–₦500K/month equiv | ₦800K–₦1M/month | Budget-conscious, emerging professionals |
| VI/Ikoyi | ₦800K–₦1.5M/month equiv | ₦1.5M–₦3M+/month | Corporate executives, luxury lifestyle |
*Annual lease prices show monthly equivalent (annual rent ÷ 12). Serviced apartments use current 2026 pricing from the Lekki market.
For detailed neighborhood comparison, see: Lekki Phase 1 vs Phase 2 vs Ajah: Complete Comparison
Serviced Apartments vs Traditional Lease
Serviced Apartments (₦1M–₦1.5M/month in Lekki)
- Monthly payments (flexible, week-to-week available)
- All utilities included (electricity, water, security, cleaning)
- Management company handles maintenance
- Best for first-time renters, uncertain duration, corporate housing
- Lower upfront cost (₦2M–₦4.5M)
- You pay 1-3 months deposit + first month
Traditional Annual Lease (₦600K–₦800K/month equivalent)
- Annual payment upfront (sometimes 2 years)
- Utilities paid separately (electricity, water, maintenance)
- Lower monthly cost, but higher upfront
- Best for long-term residents (2+ years), local knowledge
- Higher upfront cost (₦7M–₦15M+)
- You pay annual rent + 5-10% agency fee + legal fees
Full Comparison: See detailed serviced vs traditional breakdown
Upfront Costs & What to Negotiate
Traditional Lease Upfront Costs
For a ₦600K/month apartment (₦7.2M annual):
- Annual rent: ₦7.2M
- Agency fee (5-10%): ₦360K–₦720K
- Legal fees: ₦50K–₦150K
- Total upfront: ₦7.6M–₦8.1M
If landlord requires 2 years: ₦14.4M + fees = ₦15.2M–₦15.9M
Serviced Apartment Upfront Costs
- Deposit: 1-3 months rent (₦1M–₦4.5M depending on length)
- First month rent: Full amount
- Total upfront: ₦2M–₦4.5M (much lower than traditional lease)
Negotiation Tips
For Longer Leases: Sign 2-3 years for a 10-15% discount
- Example: ₦7.2M annual → offer ₦6.4M for 2-year lease
- Landlord gets certainty; you save money
For Upfront Payment: Pay 6-12 months upfront for a 3-5% discount
Off-Season Deals: Rent is cheaper May-July; most expensive November-December
Direct Landlord Savings: Rent from Facebook groups to avoid 5-10% agent fee
15-Point Apartment Inspection Checklist
Before you sign, verify these:
- ✅ Security (gated, guards, CCTV)
- ✅ Water supply (24-hour access, backup systems)
- ✅ Electricity (grid + generator, reliable backup)
- ✅ Internet speed (test WiFi yourself)
- ✅ Parking (secure, included in rent?)
- ✅ Kitchen equipment (stove, fridge working)
- ✅ Bathroom (water pressure, hot water)
- ✅ No visible pests (cockroaches, termites)
- ✅ Building condition (no major cracks or water damage)
- ✅ Neighbors & environment (noise level, safety vibe)
- ✅ Lease terms clear & in writing
- ✅ Deposit/fees fully explained
- ✅ Utilities & service charges clear
- ✅ Maintenance responsibility defined
- ✅ Landlord contact info confirmed
Full checklist: Expat Housing Checklist: 15-Point Inspection Guide
After You Sign: Next Steps
- Get everything in writing: Lease agreement, what’s included, landlord contact, building rules
- Document condition: Take photos/video of every room before moving in. Get landlord to sign a condition report.
- Set up utilities: Register with PHCN (electricity), confirm water system, book internet installation
- Meet neighbors & management: Introduce yourself to security, get building manager contact info
- Register with your embassy: Update your address for emergency purposes
Red Flags: When to Walk Away
Do NOT sign if:
- Rent is suspiciously cheap (something’s wrong)
- Landlord pressures you to decide immediately
- Major systems don’t work (water, electricity, plumbing)
- Building has obvious structural damage
- You can’t speak to a current tenant
- Landlord refuses to put terms in writing
- Your gut tells you something’s off


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