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2025: The Year Detty December Finally Lost Its Shine -By Isaac Asabor

Despite the unsettling mood surrounding this year’s yuletide, may truth rise above empty nostalgia. May clear-eyed reality silence the noise of rave culture, and may the grace to survive outweigh every call to reckless celebration. A nation struggling to breathe cannot pretend to host a “Detty December,” and saying so is not pessimism, it is truth. And sometimes, truth is the only prayer a wounded country can offer on its way to healing.

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Father Christmas

For nearly a decade, “Detty December” has been sold as West Africa’s crown jewel of festive indulgence, a cultural homecoming, a tourism magnet, a months-long parade of music festivals, concerts, road trips, club nights, and gleeful escapism. In Nigeria and Ghana alike, the phrase became shorthand for “forget your worries and enjoy life.” Lagos turned into a revolving door of concerts and day parties. Diaspora returnees flooded airports. Afrobeats superstars cashed out. Hotels overflowed. Influencers lived on Instagram Live. It was an entire economy of merriment, one that survived recessions, political turmoil, and even the tail end of COVID-19.

But 2025 has humbled the hype as no amount of marketing, celebrity appearance, Instagram noise or nostalgia can mask the truth: “there is nothing like Detty December for Nigerians this year”. Not in an economy where survival has replaced celebration. Not in a security climate where highways have become hunting grounds. Not in a season where families are choosing bags of rice over box-office concerts, because that ₦70,000 concert ticket is now the price of a week’s meals.

The country simply does not have the emotional, financial, or physical bandwidth to “get detty.” Looking at the economic situation, one would not be wrong to conjecture that Nigeria is broke, and that its people are also broke.  So, let’s stop pretending.

In fact, when Detty December became a phenomenon in the mid-2010s, Nigeria still had a functioning middle class that could set aside money for end-of-year fun. Salaries meant something. Fuel did not cost a quarter of most people’s earnings. Food inflation was not galloping. The naira was not gasping for breath. Even when things were tough, people squeezed out enough for a night out because life still had a margin for pleasure.

Today, everything has changed. Real incomes have collapsed. Businesses are closing. SMEs are suffocating. Transport costs remain punishing. Electricity tariffs have climbed. And food inflation, the most brutal indicator of economic decline, has pushed families to survival mode. A season once known for free-flowing drinks and barbecue is now defined by queues at discount markets, half-filled shopping baskets, and parents stretching budgets to the last kobo so that their children feel something resembling Christmas.

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The truth is stark: “You cannot have Detty December in a country where even December meals are no longer guaranteed”. Not only that, security has become the silent Grinch.

Beyond the economy, insecurity has strangled the sense of freedom that once made Detty December possible.

People are afraid to travel. Highways that once linked families for Christmas reunions have become corridors of kidnapping. Entire regions face the constant threat of bandits, insurgents, and gunmen. Even Lagos, the traditional playground of December, is wrestling with rising phone snatching, robberies, gang clashes, and night-time insecurity that makes club hopping a risky ambition.

Detty December thrives on freedom: freedom to move, party, attends concerts, travel, and return home at dawn. That freedom does not exist in Nigeria at the moment.

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In fact, when diaspora Nigerians stop flying in, you know the vibes are gone. As commonly experienced ahead of past Christmas celebrations, one of the strongest pillars of Detty December is the seasonal homecoming. Lagos becomes a melting pot of accents, dollars, pounds, and euros. Diaspora money fuels nightlife. International guests swell event attendance. Airport lounges become fashion runways.

But in 2025, the return traffic is thinning out, and not by accident. It seems Diaspora Nigerians are calculating: “Why travel to a place where insecurity is unpredictable?”, “Why spend thousands of dollars for a holiday that won’t feel safe?” and “Why burn my hard-earned money on a country where even the fun is now stressful?”

Even promoters know the truth. The number of mega concerts has shrunk. Sponsorship is weak. Corporate Nigeria is cutting entertainment budgets. Ticket prices are high, but the audience is shrinking.

There is a quiet, unspoken acknowledgement among event organisers: the December economy is not “Decembering”.

And this is where the tragedy lies. Detty December, love it or hate it, was not merely about noise, nightlife, and excess. It symbolised the Nigerian way of resisting hardship with community, laughter, music, and cultural reconnection. It was a form of resilience, a way to say: “Nigeria may be hard, but we can still gather, still dance, and still feel alive.”

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But when hardship becomes overwhelming, even resilience has limits. You cannot be “detty” on an empty stomach. You cannot dance with a mind occupied by insecurity. You cannot celebrate freely when life feels like a long corridor of uncertainty. People Want Christmas, Not Chaos.

In fact, Nigerians are not asking for too much this year. They want a Christmas season where: children can have clothes and a decent meal, markets are not war zones of inflated prices, travelling home does not require prayer chains, basic utilities do not collapse, and their finances do not drown in December debt.

This has nothing to do with being anti-fun. It is about priorities shifting in a country where survival has overshadowed splendour.

The average family today is budgeting for rice, stew ingredients, small chicken, transport money, and maybe a modest outing for the kids, not concerts, clubbing, beach raves, and wild nights in Victoria Island. This is not a moral argument. It is an economic reality.

Given the foregoing lamentable situation been graphically painted in this context, it is not out of place to opine that 2025 has become the year Nigerians need calm, not excess.

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This year’s holiday season should be a moment of introspection, not a chase for a lifestyle the economy cannot sustain. Nigeria needs stability, not escapism. Families need rest, not reckless spending. Communities need safety, not the illusion of festive abundance.

The real “detty” thing is that this December is not the fun. It is the hardship. The real “dirty” reality is the poverty statistics. The real noise is the noise of survival.

Without resort to sounding exaggerative, it is not out of place to opine that the season of sober celebration is here, and that it is not a defeat. This is because Detty December may be on hold, but Christmas is not cancelled.

Nigerians can still find joy, just not through the excesses of the past. There is value in quiet Christmases, in family meals, in church services, in community gatherings. There is dignity in simplicity when the country demands caution. There is meaning in acknowledging that celebration does not always require extravagance.

Without a doubt, this December will be different, subdued, sharp, honest. And maybe this honesty is what Nigeria needs right now.

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Given the foregoing, the facts remain that if the country ever returns to Joy, Detty December will return too.  Again, everyone should have it at the back of his or her mind that cultural phenomena do not die; rather, they hibernate.

In fact, when Nigeria becomes safer, when the economy breathes again, when people can afford to dream beyond daily survival, Detty December will bounce back, louder, brighter, with the full force of a population that knows how to enjoy life. But 2025 is simply not that year with the way things are at the moment.

Despite the unsettling mood surrounding this year’s yuletide, may truth rise above empty nostalgia. May clear-eyed reality silence the noise of rave culture, and may the grace to survive outweigh every call to reckless celebration. A nation struggling to breathe cannot pretend to host a “Detty December,” and saying so is not pessimism, it is truth. And sometimes, truth is the only prayer a wounded country can offer on its way to healing.

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