Fresh government data shows Nigeria’s trade position with the United States slipping deeper into the red in Q1 2026, with the bilateral deficit hitting approximately N1.63 trillion, a stark measure of how much more the country buys from America than it sells to it.
According to the National Bureau of Statistics’ Foreign Trade in Goods Statistics report, Nigeria’s exports to the United States fell to N1.18 trillion in Q1 2026, down 23.69 percent from N1.54 trillion recorded in the same period a year earlier. That represents a loss of N365.64 billion in export revenue from a single trading partner in just twelve months.
The timing is not incidental. In late July 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order raising tariffs on Nigerian exports from 14 percent to 15 percent under his administration’s so-called “reciprocal” tariff regime, a sweeping policy designed to penalize countries that maintain trade surpluses against the United States.
While crude oil, the backbone of Nigeria’s export portfolio, has been partially shielded from some tariff measures, non-oil goods now face steeper duties, dampening American appetite for Nigerian products at precisely the moment Abuja is trying to diversify its export base beyond petroleum.
While Nigeria’s export earnings from the US contracted, its import bill from the same country moved in the opposite direction and dramatically so.
Nigeria’s imports from the United States surged by 97.33 per cent year-on-year to N2.81 trillion in Q1 2026, up from N1.42 trillion in the corresponding period of 2025. The figure also climbed 74.14 percent compared with the preceding quarter, when imports stood at N1.61 trillion. The result: Nigeria imported goods worth more than double the value of what it exported to the US during the quarter.
The United States now ranks as Nigeria’s second-largest source of imports, behind only China, which supplied N5.10 trillion worth of goods, roughly 37.42 per cent of Nigeria’s total import bill.
American goods accounted for 20.60 per cent of all imports, a notable share that signals deep structural dependency on US-sourced products even as political and trade friction rises.
Despite the bilateral imbalance with the US, Nigeria’s overall trade position remained in surplus for the quarter. Total exports reached N21.17 trillion, up 2.77 per cent year-on-year, while total imports fell 18.17 per cent to N13.62 trillion, leaving a trade surplus of N7.55 trillion. The NBS attributed this improvement largely to higher crude oil exports and a decline in petroleum product imports.
Crude oil remained the engine of Nigeria’s export economy, accounting for N11.20 trillion, or 52.92 percent of total exports. Non-oil exports contributed N3.19 trillion, or 15.05 percent, a figure the government is under pressure to grow if it hopes to reduce vulnerability to oil price volatility and external tariff shocks.
Europe remained Nigeria’s largest regional export market, absorbing N7.93 trillion in goods, while Asia followed at N6.42 trillion. India led as the single largest destination for Nigerian exports, taking in N2.77 trillion, or 13.09 percent of the total. France, the Netherlands, and Spain rounded out the top four, each absorbing between N1.63 trillion and N1.97 trillion.
The United States, despite its outsized political significance, ranked fifth, accounting for just 5.56 percent of Nigeria’s total exports.
The trade picture is complicated further by an emerging threat on the regulatory front. Nigeria is among 60 economies identified by the Office of the United States Trade Representative as having allegedly failed to prohibit and enforce bans on goods produced with forced labor.
Under Section 301 of the US Trade Act of 1974, the USTR concluded that this failure constitutes an unreasonable burden on American commerce and has proposed an additional 12.5 per cent tariff on affected exports pending a public consultation process.
Should those tariffs be implemented, Nigerian exporters already struggling with the existing 15 per cent reciprocal duty could find themselves facing a cumulative wall of trade barriers that further erodes their competitiveness in the American market.
The federal government, for its part, has opted for strategic patience over confrontation. Nigeria’s minister of industry, trade, and investment, Jumoke Oduwole, has been unequivocal: there will be no tit-for-tat trade war with Washington.
“Nigeria remains responsive; we’re not reacting. We’re focused on the eight-point agenda of President Bola Tinubu. We will continue to support domestic investors and expand market access for Nigerian businesses,” she said in recent remarks.
Oduwole pointed to Nigeria’s African Continental Free Trade Area strategy as a longer-term hedge against over-reliance on any single major power and flagged September’s renegotiation of the African Growth and Opportunity Act as a pivotal moment.
AGOA, which grants eligible sub-Saharan African countries duty-free access to the US market for thousands of products, has historically been a lifeline for Nigeria’s non-oil exporters.
“It’s mostly an energy trading relationship, but we are waiting to see what happens with AGOA in September. We are also growing exports to other African countries and expanding partnerships with Brazil, China, Japan, and the UAE,” she said.
Some economists see opportunity embedded in the disruption. Dr. Aliyu Ilias, Chief Executive Officer of CSA Advisory, urged Nigeria not to view the tariff environment solely as a threat.
“I think it’s a good time that this is happening to Nigeria. Trump’s tariff is not only for Nigeria. The advantage is that we are now exporting more overall, which is positive for us,” he said, noting that Nigeria’s BRICS membership and relationships with other emerging economies offer alternative pathways for trade expansion.
“The tariff that is affecting us is also affecting others, so it may be a good opportunity,” Ilias added, pointing to countries like India and China, also under US trade pressure, as potential new partners in a reshaping global trade order.
The Q1 2026 data lay bare a structural tension at the heart of Nigeria’s trade strategy: a relationship with Washington that generates far more in imports than it earns in exports and which is increasingly governed by political decisions made in the Oval Office rather than by market forces.
As Abuja recalibrates its alliances and doubles down on diversification, the coming months and the fate of AGOA in particular may prove decisive for the trajectory of one of Africa’s most consequential trading relationships.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Nigeria’s trade relationship with the United States is under serious strain. In Q1 2026, Nigeria exported N1.18 trillion worth of goods to the US while importing N2.81 trillion, leaving a bilateral deficit of N1.63 trillion.
The root cause is Trump’s escalating tariff regime, which has made Nigerian goods more expensive in the American market while doing nothing to reduce Nigeria’s dependence on US imports. A looming additional 12.5 percent tariff over forced labor allegations could worsen the situation further.
Abuja’s response, diversifying toward Africa, BRICS, and other partners, is the right instinct but remains a long-term play. The real near-term test is September’s AGOA renegotiation, which could either cushion the blow or deepen it.
Nigeria is currently paying far more into this relationship than it is getting out of it, and Washington holds most of the cards.














