Nigeria retains one of the lowest petrol prices globally even as fresh tensions in the Middle East push international crude costs higher.
Local pump prices have risen sharply in recent weeks, yet the country still sits well below the world average. NaijaChoice News analysis of fresh data from GlobalPetrolPrices.com confirms this edge.
As of 16 March 2026, petrol in Nigeria averages $0.88 (roughly N1,194) per litre. The global average stands at $1.37 per litre.
This keeps Nigeria ahead of several big economies. Petrol sells for $1.08 in the United States, $1.10 in India and $1.19 in South Africa. European markets record much steeper rates, with the United Kingdom at $1.87 per litre and other advanced nations higher still.
The picture looks similar across West Africa. Neighbours such as Togo, Benin, Ghana and Cameroon all post prices above Nigeria’s level.
Analysts credit the Dangote Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals for this relative calm. The facility has prioritised supply to the domestic market and absorbed part of the recent cost surges triggered by disruptions linked to the Iran conflict.
Marketers and observers say the refinery has prevented long queues and outright shortages that hit many other countries. It now meets the bulk of national demand after years of heavy fuel imports.
NaijaChoice News notes that very few nations worldwide sell petrol below the $1 threshold without subsidies or strict price controls. Nigeria runs a fully deregulated downstream sector since the 2023 subsidy removal, leaving prices exposed to global crude swings and exchange rates.
Even so, domestic refining has limited the damage. Pump prices climbed about 39.5 per cent amid the latest crisis, a milder rise than the over 49 per cent and 67 per cent recorded in Vietnam and Cambodia respectively.
Industry watchers insist the outcome would have been far worse without Dangote’s scale. Foreign exchange pressure and widespread scarcity would likely have followed.
Instead, the refinery has delivered supply security and helped hold Nigeria steady among the world’s more affordable fuel markets at a time of global turmoil.
Consumers continue to feel the pinch from recent adjustments, but the buffer provided by local refining remains a clear advantage for the economy and daily life across the country.
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