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    Home » Nigeria external reserves top $46 billion, highest since 2018
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    Nigeria external reserves top $46 billion, highest since 2018

    January 27, 2026

    MENA Newswire, ABUJA: Nigeria’s external reserves rose above $46 billion on January 22, 2026, reaching their highest level in about eight years and adding to signs of improving foreign currency buffers after a period of tighter liquidity and exchange rate strain. Data published by the Central Bank of Nigeria put reserves at about $46.01 billion. The last time reserves were at a comparable level was August 24, 2018, when they were just above $46 billion, according to historical central bank figures cited in market reports tracking the series.

    Nigeria external reserves top $46 billion, highest since 2018
    Nigeria’s external reserves rise above $46bn, the strongest level in eight years. (AI-generated image)

    The latest level reflects a continuation of gains recorded through 2025 and into early 2026. Central bank data show reserves were about $45.86 billion on January 15, 2026, implying an increase of roughly $150 million in one week. Nigeria’s finance minister said earlier this month that reserves had risen to about $45.5 billion as reforms entered what he described as a consolidation phase.

    While external reserves are not a measure of gross domestic product, the $46 billion mark places Nigeria among Africa’s top group of reserve holders by foreign exchange and gold reserves, a category typically led by larger North African economies and South Africa. Nigeria’s reserve position is closely watched because the country relies heavily on imports for fuel, machinery, pharmaceuticals and industrial inputs.

    Monetary and currency backdrop

    Nigeria’s reserve build-up follows policy shifts introduced since 2023, including the removal of fuel subsidies and changes to the foreign exchange framework intended to improve price discovery and reduce distortions between official and parallel market rates. The central bank has also tightened oversight of parts of the currency market and taken steps to clear foreign exchange backlogs, according to previous official statements.

    In April 2025, the central bank reported that its net foreign exchange reserves, a measure that adjusts gross reserves for certain short-term liabilities, had risen sharply by the end of 2024. The bank attributed the improvement to reduced short-term foreign exchange obligations such as swaps and forwards, alongside measures aimed at boosting confidence and increasing inflows.

    Nigeria’s economy remains sensitive to oil receipts, which provide the bulk of export earnings and a major share of public revenue. Changes in oil production, global prices, and the pace of dollar inflows through official channels can affect reserve levels, while external debt service and import demand can draw them down.

    Reserve position and regional standing

    Nigeria’s foreign reserves serve as a key buffer for external payments, including the settlement of imports and official obligations. The level is also watched by investors as an indicator of the country’s ability to meet foreign currency demand across the economy, though the central bank does not commit reserves to a single policy objective.

    The move back above $46 billion comes after reserves spent much of the past decade below that level, reflecting years of pressure from lower oil output, periods of elevated import demand, and episodes of tighter access to foreign exchange. By comparison, the central bank reported gross reserves at around $40.19 billion at the end of 2024, up from about $33.22 billion a year earlier, underscoring the upward trajectory before the latest peak.

    Nigeria’s reserve figures are published periodically by the central bank and are tracked by domestic financial markets as a headline indicator of external balance. The $46 billion threshold is widely used as a benchmark because it marks a return to levels last seen before several years of macroeconomic stress and exchange rate adjustments.

    The latest data add to a run of official indicators highlighted by the government in recent weeks, including reported improvements in some headline macroeconomic metrics and market conditions. The central bank’s reserve update, dated January 22, provides one of the clearest current snapshots of Nigeria’s external liquidity position entering 2026.

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