A weaker currency and a continent-wide free trade area have quietly created one of the biggest growth opportunities Nigerian SMEs have seen in years. Here’s how to take your first formal step abroad.
Two forces have come together to make exporting unusually attractive for Nigerian small businesses in 2026. The first is the weak naira: the same currency weakness that raises your import costs makes anything you sell abroad cheaper and more competitive in foreign markets. The second is the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), which opens up a continent-wide market with reduced trade barriers between African countries. For SMEs in agriculture, food processing, fashion and crafts, this is one of the strongest growth routes available right now.
What it takes to export formally
To export properly — and to get paid properly — you generally start by registering your business with the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC). From there, exports are processed through an NXP form handled by your bank, which is the document that makes your shipment and the payment for it official. It is worth learning that process with your bank before your first shipment rather than during it.
The weak naira is only a disadvantage if you spend dollars. If you earn them, it’s an advantage — if you price correctly.
Why formalisation is the unlock
Export rewards businesses that are formalised and compliant — which is why this article sits at the end of a series about getting your house in order. You will need your CAC registration, and for many goods you will need the NAFDAC or SON certifications covered earlier, because destination countries have their own standards your products must meet. The businesses that have done the unglamorous work of registering, certifying and keeping clean records are precisely the ones positioned to seize the export opportunity. Informality keeps you in the local market; formality is your passport out of it.
Price for the opportunity
Finally, price deliberately. The weak naira is an advantage only if you cost your exports correctly — earning in dollars or other strong currencies while your costs are largely in naira can be highly profitable, but only if you have done the maths. Explore the AfCFTA preferences available for trade with other African countries, confirm the standards your destination market requires, and treat your first export not as a one-off but as the beginning of a new revenue line.
| ✓ YOUR ACTION CHECKLIST |
| ❑ Register your business with NEPC to export formally. |
| ❑ Learn the NXP (export) form process with your bank before your first shipment. |
| ❑ Confirm destination-country standards and your NAFDAC/SON certifications for the goods. |
| ❑ Price in FX deliberately — the weak naira is an advantage if you cost correctly. |
| ❑ Explore AfCFTA preferences for trade with other African countries. |
Formalise, comply, grow
Read together, these ten briefings below point in one direction. Most of the 2026 reforms are, on balance, pro-SME — lower taxes, free registration, cheaper development finance, an open export market. The businesses that win this year will be the formalised ones: registered, with clean books, correct filings and current sector approvals.
Informality used to be a way to stay invisible. In 2026 it increasingly just locks you out of the reliefs, grants and contracts the new rules unlock. Get formal, stay compliant, and use the breathing room the tax and registration changes give you to grow.
Previous — 10 of 10 New 2026 Nigeria Tax Policy Reform Series
2026 Nigeria Business Policy Reforms Guide
- CAC in 2026: How to Register for as Little as ₦11,000 — and the New Ownership Rule You Can’t Ignore
- The Floating Naira and Your Business: How to Price, Plan and Survive When the Exchange Rate Moves
- Why Bank Loans Are So Expensive in 2026 — and Where Smart SMEs Find Cheaper Money Instead
- Your Bank Is Changing: What Recapitalisation Means for Your Business Accounts, Loans and Insurance
- The Data Protection Law Most SMEs Don’t Know They’re Breaking — and the Fines That Scale With Your Turnover
- The Nigeria Startup Act: How a Government “Label” Can Unlock Tax Breaks, Grants and Support for Your Tech Business
- NAFDAC, NCC, SON and the Rest: The Sector Rules That Can Shut You Down — or Open Big Doors
- From Naija to the World: How the Weak Naira and AfCFTA Make 2026 the Year to Start Exporting
