Africa

Nigeria’s Air Travel Crisis: Why High Fares & Poor Service Are Killing Domestic Airlines -By Jeff Okoroafor

Nigerian airline passenger numbers are plummeting. My detailed op-ed argues high fares, chronic delays, and passenger disrespect are the core causes, made worse by economic pressure. Discover why insecurity is the only thing preventing a total collapse.

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The recent alarm bells sounded by airline chiefs over declining domestic passenger traffic should surprise no one. The figures from the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) tell a stark story: an 11% drop over three years, from 14 million passengers in 2022 to 12.5 million in 2024. While industry executives like Ibom Air’s George Uriesi point to the macroeconomic climate—inflation, low disposable income—this is only the surface of a much deeper crisis. The truth is, the Nigerian domestic airline industry is experiencing a self-inflicted collapse, driven by exorbitant pricing, operational incompetence, and a profound disrespect for the very passengers it claims to serve. The small percentage decline is a deceptive metric; it masks a mass exodus of potential travelers who are only still flying because the terrifying state of the nation’s roads leaves them with no safer alternative.

The Tyranny of Ticket Prices: A Luxury Good in a Struggling Economy

Let’s state the uncomfortable fact the airlines avoid: domestic air travel in Nigeria has been priced into the realm of absurdity. A one-hour flight from Lagos to Abuja routinely costs between ₦150,000 to ₦300,000—a sum that represents a month’s salary for a significant portion of the working class, and a severe financial burden even for the middle class. When analysts cite “rising airfare costs,” they understate a reality that borders on exploitation.

This pricing is not merely a passive reaction to macroeconomic headwinds like forex volatility and high fuel costs. It is a function of a broken business model that passes every single operational inefficiency directly onto the passenger. Airlines complain about the cost of Jet A1, but where is the aggressive lobbying for the establishment of a functional domestic refining capacity or for tax breaks on aviation fuel? They bemoan forex for spare parts, yet where is the collaborative strategy for fleet harmonization to reduce maintenance complexity and cost? Instead of solving these systemic issues, the easy solution has been to repeatedly hike fares, effectively telling Nigerians, “Pay up or stay put.” In an economy where real wages are collapsing, choosing “stay put” becomes the only rational option for all but the most urgent, expense-account travel.

Operational Indiscipline: Delays, Disruptions, and Disdain

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The financial insult is compounded by daily operational injury. The Nigerian flying experience is now synonymous with chronic delays and last-minute cancellations. Passengers are herded like cattle, left for hours without clear communication, and subjected to schedules that are mere suggestions rather than commitments. This chronic unreliability has a tangible economic cost: missed business meetings, botched contract signings, delayed medical consultations, and ruined family events. When an airline’s failure to keep time directly causes a professional or personal loss, the passenger doesn’t just lose money; they lose trust. Many have calculated that the “savings” from taking a road trip—despite its risks—are preferable to paying a premium for airline-induced uncertainty.

This points to the core issue: a catastrophic failure in customer respect. From the booking process to the arrival hall, the passenger is often treated as a nuisance. Customer service lines are perpetually jammed, refunds for cancelled flights are battles fought over months, and complaints are met with indifference. This culture of impunity suggests an industry that believes it has a captive market. To some extent, due to insecurity, it does. But that captive market is shrinking, and its patience has expired.

The Insecurity Wild Card: The Only Reason the Decline Isn’t Catastrophic

This is the critical context missing from most analyses. The 11% decline is not a measure of dissatisfaction with air travel; it is a measure of how desperate Nigerians are to avoid the roads. Banditry, kidnapping, and fatal accidents on dilapidated highways have made interstate road travel a lethal gamble. If Nigeria’s roads were as safe and secure as those in Ghana or Rwanda, the decline in domestic air passenger numbers would not be 11%—it would be 50% or more. The airlines are, quite literally, being saved from their own folly by the nation’s security crisis. They are profiting from fear. This is not a sustainable business model; it is a morbid parasitism on the nation’s deepest anxieties.

A Prescription for Survival: Beyond Hollow Summits

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The solutions offered at summits—promos, tax reviews—are necessary but insufficient band-aids. The industry requires radical surgery.

1. Fleet and Cost Harmonization: As highlighted by industry voices like Gbenga Onitilo of Travelden, until airlines move beyond the wasteful model of operating multiple, disparate aircraft types (Boeings, Airbuses, Embraers, and CRJs all in one small fleet), maintenance and training costs will remain prohibitive. A collective shift toward a dominant, efficient aircraft type for the domestic market would drive down costs industry-wide.

2. Invest in Operational Excellence: Airlines must invest in modern MRO (Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul) facilities within Nigeria, professional revenue management systems, and robust customer relationship platforms. Punctuality must become a religion, not an aspiration.

3. Transparency and Respect: A mandatory, public-facing “Service Charter” should be instituted by the regulatory body, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), detailing compensation schemes for delays and cancellations. The era of “take it or leave it” must end.

4. Government’s Strategic Role: The government must move beyond collecting taxes and fees. It must act as an enabler: facilitating access to forex for critical spare parts, incentivizing local MRO development, and most importantly, making alternative transport (secure roads and rails) viable to create healthy competition that forces airlines to innovate on price and service.

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The current decline is not just a commercial wake-up call; it is a five-alarm fire. Nigerian airlines are not just battling a tough economy; they are battling the justifiable resentment of a exploited populace. The runway is indeed there, and the latent demand is massive. But the industry will not taxi toward recovery by blaming inflation alone. It must first look in the mirror, confront its culture of inefficiency and disrespect, and remember that its survival depends not on the persistence of insecurity, but on winning back the confidence of a nation it has taken for granted for too long. The choice is clear: reform or remain grounded.

Jeff Okoroafor is a social accountability advocate and a political commentator focused on governance, accountability, and social justice in West Africa.

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