When the Federal Government announced a reduction in vehicle import duties from 70% to 40%, many Nigerians expected immediate relief. After years of rising car prices, the assumption was simple: lower tariffs should mean cheaper cars.
But weeks after the policy rollout, that expectation hasn’t matched reality. Car prices remain largely unchanged, and for many buyers, it feels like nothing has happened.
The reason is straightforward but often overlooked: import duty is only one piece of a much larger cost structure.
In April 2026, under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the government introduced a revised tariff system aimed at reducing inflation and making transportation more affordable. The new policy reduced duties on fully built vehicles while also granting zero-duty waivers on electric vehicles and mass transit buses. On paper, the move was positioned as a strategic intervention to ease economic pressure and improve mobility.
The logic made sense. Lower import duties should reduce landing costs, which should then reflect in market prices. However, the actual cost of importing a vehicle into Nigeria tells a different story.
Take a typical example of a foreign-used 2015 Toyota Camry. With a purchase price of $8,000 and an exchange rate of around ₦1,500 to the dollar, the base cost alone comes to approximately ₦12 million. Once shipping and insurance are added, the cost rises to nearly ₦14 million before the car even reaches Nigerian ports.
This is where the real cost pressure begins.
Even without factoring in import duty, several mandatory charges quickly increase the total. Fees like the Comprehensive Import Supervision Scheme, the ECOWAS levy, and Value Added Tax add over a million naira to the cost. Beyond that, port-related expenses, terminal handling, documentation, clearing agent fees, and inland transportation, push the total even higher.
By the time all these costs are accounted for, the landed cost of the vehicle climbs to about ₦15.85 million. That is an increase of nearly ₦3.85 million above the original purchase price, without including import duty at all.
This is why the expected drop in car prices has not materialised.
According to importers and dealers, the biggest factor influencing prices today is not tariff policy but the exchange rate. When the naira fluctuates, any savings from reduced duties are quickly erased. Add to that rising global shipping costs and increasing port charges, and the impact of tariff cuts becomes marginal in the bigger picture.
There is also the issue of market dynamics. Dealers cannot reduce prices drastically without incurring losses, especially when their overall costs remain high. For many of them, the tariff reduction is simply not enough to offset the broader economic pressures affecting imports.
While consumers struggle to feel the benefits, the policy does create some shifts within the industry. Importers may see increased activity due to lower entry barriers, but local assemblers could face stiffer competition from imported vehicles. This creates a delicate balance between improving affordability and protecting domestic production.
The zero-duty policy on electric vehicles is another ambitious aspect of the reform. It signals a push toward cleaner transportation and reduced dependence on petrol. However, challenges such as limited charging infrastructure, technical expertise, and consumer awareness mean that adoption will likely be gradual.
Ultimately, the success of the policy will be judged not by its intentions but by its outcomes. For now, the reality on the ground suggests that tariff cuts alone are not enough to make cars affordable in Nigeria.
For buyers, the key takeaway is clear. It is no longer enough to focus on headline prices or government announcements. What matters is the total cost of ownership, including all the hidden charges that come with importing a vehicle.
Until exchange rate stability improves and logistics costs are addressed, car prices are unlikely to see significant reductions.
The promise of cheaper cars is still possible—but not without broader economic changes.
For now, the smart move is to pay attention to real market prices, avoid assumptions, and make decisions based on verified information rather than expectations.


