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Business & Economy

70% Nigeria’s Untitled Properties Trap $300bn Real Estate Wealth

Martin Ogumah
Last updated: May 12, 2026 1:31 pm
Martin Ogumah
May 12, 2026
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Surveyors warn weak land documentation is blocking mortgages, investment flows and economic growth

Nigeria’s real estate sector may be sitting on one of the largest pools of “dead capital” in Africa. Industry experts now estimate that between 60 and 70 per cent of landed properties across the country lack legal title documentation, a structural problem analysts say is locking billions of dollars out of the formal economy and weakening Nigeria’s long-term investment attractiveness.

The warning came from the National Institute of Estate Surveyors and Valuers, Lagos State Branch, during activities marking the 2026 Valuation Day themed “Unlocking Nigeria’s Wealth: How Valuation Builds Our Prosperity.”

According to the Chairman of the Lagos branch, Tosin Kadiri, untitled properties cannot effectively participate in the formal financial system, making them economically underutilised despite their physical existence and market value.

“When a property is untitled, technically, you have lost the potential of that particular property because you cannot use the property for investment purpose, compensation purpose or mortgage access,” Kadiri said.

His remarks reinforce growing concerns among economists, urban development experts and global investors that Nigeria’s land administration system remains one of the country’s biggest barriers to capital formation, housing finance and infrastructure development.

Nigeria’s Invisible Wealth Problem

The issue goes far beyond documentation.

Globally, titled property serves as one of the most important foundations of wealth creation. In advanced economies, property ownership allows households and businesses to access mortgages, credit facilities, insurance products, investment financing and intergenerational wealth transfer systems.

In Nigeria, however, millions of properties remain outside the formal legal and financial architecture.

Without legal titles, landowners often cannot:

  • Access bank loans using property as collateral
  • Secure mortgage financing
  • Attract institutional investors
  • Obtain proper compensation during infrastructure acquisition
  • Participate fully in structured real estate markets

This creates what economists describe as “dead capital” – physical assets with economic potential that remain financially unusable because they lack formal recognition within legal and banking systems.

Analysts estimate that Nigeria’s untitled land assets may represent hundreds of billions of dollars in trapped economic value.

Implications for Global Investors

The development carries major implications for foreign direct investment, institutional real estate financing and international infrastructure capital.

For global investors, land security and legal clarity remain among the most important indicators when assessing investment destinations.

Countries with weak property registration systems often struggle to attract long-term capital because investors require predictable legal frameworks to protect assets and enforce contracts.

Nigeria’s untitled property challenge therefore increases:

  • Investment risk perception
  • Transaction costs
  • Legal uncertainty
  • Financing difficulties
  • Urban planning inefficiencies

This partly explains why Nigeria, despite its enormous population and urbanisation rate, continues to underperform in large-scale mortgage penetration and organised housing finance compared to several emerging economies.

The country’s mortgage market remains extremely shallow relative to GDP, limiting access to affordable housing and slowing formal real estate expansion.

Housing Crisis Meets Financial Exclusion

The implications are particularly severe within Nigeria’s housing sector.

With Nigeria facing an estimated housing deficit exceeding 20 million units, analysts argue that the inability to formalise property ownership is worsening urban inequality and excluding millions from wealth-building opportunities.

A functional title system does more than validate ownership. It creates liquidity.

Once property becomes bankable, it can support:

  • Mortgage-backed lending
  • Construction finance
  • Housing development
  • Urban regeneration projects
  • Real estate investment trusts
  • Pension-backed infrastructure funding

Without formal documentation, however, property largely remains dormant wealth.

This explains why many Nigerians own land yet remain financially constrained. The assets exist physically but cannot easily generate economic leverage.

Why Valuation Matters to the Economy

The surveyors also raised concerns about widespread informal valuation practices in Nigeria’s property market.

According to Kadiri, many property owners and buyers still rely on rumours, assumptions and speculative sentiment rather than professional valuation standards.

This creates pricing distortions, weakens market transparency and complicates investor decision-making.

Professional valuation systems are central to modern economies because they help determine:

  • Fair market pricing
  • Asset viability
  • Government asset management
  • Compensation frameworks
  • Insurance coverage
  • Infrastructure investment decisions

The immediate past Chairman of the Lagos branch of NIESV, Olugbenga Ismail, noted that even government institutions often lack accurate data regarding the value of public assets.

Analysts say this reflects a broader institutional challenge confronting many African economies: weak asset mapping and poor integration between land systems, urban planning and financial infrastructure.

The Global Economic Context

The conversation around land formalisation is becoming increasingly important globally as governments seek new ways to unlock domestic capital for economic growth.

Countries such as Rwanda, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates and parts of Latin America have demonstrated how digital land registries and efficient title systems can dramatically improve investment flows and urban development outcomes.

Technology is also reshaping the future of land administration through:

  • Geospatial intelligence
  • Blockchain-based registries
  • Digital identity systems
  • AI-powered mapping
  • Smart urban planning platforms

Nigeria’s growing focus on geospatial systems and land digitisation suggests policymakers increasingly recognise the economic importance of property formalisation.

For international investors, this could create emerging opportunities in:

  • Proptech platforms
  • Mortgage finance
  • Smart city infrastructure
  • Land administration technology
  • GIS and geospatial services
  • Urban housing development

BrandiQ Intelligence

Nigeria’s untitled property challenge represents more than a documentation problem. It reflects a deeper economic contradiction within Africa’s largest economy: enormous physical wealth coexisting with limited financial liquidity.

In practical terms, millions of Nigerians possess assets they cannot fully monetise.

For investors, the issue presents both a warning and an opportunity. The warning lies in the legal and structural inefficiencies still affecting Nigeria’s property market. The opportunity lies in the enormous value that could be unlocked if land reforms, title digitisation and valuation systems are modernised.

As Africa urbanises rapidly over the next two decades, countries capable of transforming land into bankable, investable and digitally traceable assets may emerge as major winners in the global competition for infrastructure and real estate capital.

Nigeria possesses the scale to lead that transformation. The question is whether its institutions can move quickly enough to formalise the wealth already sitting in plain sight.

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ByMartin Ogumah
Martin Ogumah, is BrandiQ Head of Content Assets and Marketing. He is a graduate of sociology, with a master’s degree in political science, and over 15 years’ experience in content development, marketing and public relations.
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