Nigeria’s bill for food imports dropped to $2.34 billion in 2025, a 7.37 percent decrease from the $2.53 billion recorded the year prior, according to data from the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) latest Quarterly Statistical Bulletin.
While the figures may appear modest on the surface, analysts say the shift carries far-reaching implications for how Africa’s largest economy is rebalancing its foreign exchange priorities in the face of persistent fiscal pressures.
For a country that has long leaned heavily on food imports to plug gaps in domestic agricultural production from wheat and sugar to dairy and processed goods, the downward trend is being read by economists not merely as a statistical footnote but as an early signal of structural change.
Financial analysts reviewing the CBN data say the numbers point to something deeper than seasonal fluctuation or a temporary dip in consumer demand.
“We are seeing a structural realignment in how the country allocates its hard currency,” one analyst said. “The drop in food-related foreign exchange demand suggests a moderation in import reliance, even as Nigeria continues to navigate food security challenges.”
Those challenges remain formidable. Nigeria’s food inflation has been among the most acute economic pressures facing ordinary citizens in recent years, driven by supply chain disruptions, the lingering effects of the naira’s devaluation, and persistent insecurity in key agricultural zones across the North.
Drilling into the month-by-month data reveals a more nuanced picture. Food imports consumed an average of $195.28 million monthly throughout 2025, but that average masks considerable volatility across the calendar year.
The first half of 2025 was notably subdued, with April recording the year’s lowest monthly figure at $141.13 million. Demand, however, recovered sharply in the second half, climbing steadily before hitting a peak of $248.60 million in September, a swing of more than $107 million within a single year.
A CBN official, speaking on condition of anonymity, attributed the second-half surge to predictable seasonal dynamics. “The spikes we observed in the third and fourth quarters, particularly the September peak, reflect traditional seasonal stocking ahead of the festive period,” the official explained. “However, the macro trend remains clear: the overall trajectory for food import financing is leaning downward.”
That trajectory aligns with an observed pattern in which retailers, manufacturers, and distributors front-load import orders in anticipation of elevated consumer demand during the October-to-December festive season, a well-established cycle in Nigeria’s commercial calendar.
Perhaps the most consequential finding buried within the CBN bulletin is not the absolute decline in food import spending but the dramatic shrinkage of its share within Nigeria’s broader foreign exchange economy.
Food imports, which accounted for 9.49 percent of total foreign exchange utilization in 2024, fell to just 4.97 percent in 2025, nearly halving their proportional weight in a single year. That dramatic compression did not occur because food spending collapsed. It occurred because Nigeria’s total foreign exchange utilization surged by a striking 77 percent, climbing from $26.65 billion in 2024 to $47.17 billion in 2025.
The overall forex pie grew enormously, and food imports claimed a far smaller slice of it.
“Food imports took up a much smaller portion of overall forex demand, even though the economy used substantially more foreign exchange across other vital sectors,” the CBN report noted.
What, then, was consuming the expanded foreign exchange envelope? Finance and economic expert Sola Adekanmbi points to a resurgence in non-agricultural sectors, particularly manufacturing and industrial retooling, as the primary driver of the forex expansion.
“An expanding forex pie coupled with a shrinking food bill is exactly what the economy needs to witness for sustainable long-term growth,” Adekanmbi said. “It implies that liquidity is increasingly being directed toward productive capacity and industrial inputs rather than consumption.”
His reading echoes a broader narrative that Nigerian policymakers have been keen to project: that the painful economic reforms of recent years, including the removal of the fuel subsidy and the unification of the foreign exchange market, are beginning to redirect capital flows toward sectors that can generate output, employment, and long-term value, rather than simply feeding consumption-driven import demand.
If that thesis holds, the data from 2025 represents more than a line item on a balance sheet. It represents, at least in embryonic form, the kind of economic reorientation that development economists have long argued Nigeria must achieve to escape the structural trap of import dependency.
Still, seasoned observers of Nigeria’s economic trajectory have learned hard lessons about reading too much into a single year’s data. Food security remains a deeply structural challenge, and the CBN’s own figures show that import demand, while declining as a share of forex, is far from negligible in absolute terms.
The nearly $2.34 billion spent on food imports in 2025 still represents a substantial drain on foreign reserves that remain under pressure from external debt obligations, capital outflows, and the ever-present volatility of global oil markets, upon which Nigeria’s fiscal position remains uncomfortably dependent.
What the 2025 data does offer, analysts say, is a credible basis for cautious optimism, a data point suggesting that, slowly and unevenly, Nigeria’s economic fundamentals may be shifting in a more productive direction.
Whether that shift proves durable will depend on factors well beyond any single bulletin from the apex bank: the security of agricultural supply corridors, the consistency of monetary policy, the pace of industrial investment, and, above all, the purchasing power of millions of Nigerians for whom the price of food remains the most immediate economic reality of daily life.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s food import bill fell to $2.34 billion in 2025, but the real story is not the 7.37 percent decline in spending; it is where the money is going instead.
With total foreign exchange utilisation expanding by 77 percent to $47.17 billion, a growing share of Nigeria’s hard currency is being channelled toward manufacturing, industrial inputs, and productive capacity rather than consumption-driven imports.
Food’s share of forex demand nearly halved, from 9.49 percent to just 4.97 percent, in a single year. That shift, if sustained, is precisely the structural reorientation Nigeria’s economy needs: less reliance on importing what it consumes and more investment in building what it produces.
















