For early-stage founders in Lagos, one of the quietest but most persistent drains on a young company’s runway is workspace. Before revenue arrives, before investment closes, and before the business finds its footing, the cost of having a professional environment to build from can consume a disproportionate share of whatever capital a founder has managed to scrape together.
The Lagos State Employment Trust Fund, in partnership with Lagos Innovates, has a programme designed to address exactly that — and applications are now open.
The Workspace Voucher Programme offers selected startups subsidised access to quality co-working and hub spaces across Lagos, covering between 30% and 75% of workspace membership costs for periods ranging from three to twelve months. The financial support is structured across three tiers: ₦25,000 monthly for a three-month engagement, ₦50,000 monthly for six months, and up to ₦150,000 monthly for a full twelve-month membership — giving founders flexibility to apply for support that matches their current stage and operational needs.
The total value of support available reaches ₦1.8 million for startups that qualify for the top tier — a meaningful contribution to operational costs at a stage when every naira of preserved capital extends a company’s ability to build, iterate, and reach revenue.
The logic behind the initiative is straightforward. Infrastructure costs — workspace, utilities, administrative overhead — consume founder attention and capital that would be better directed at product development, customer acquisition, and team building. By subsidising that infrastructure cost, the programme frees early-stage founders to focus on execution rather than survival.
Eligibility requirements are specific. Applicants must be Lagos residents running tech or innovation-driven startups that are less than three years old. Tax compliance with the Lagos Internal Revenue Service is mandatory, and founders must present valid Lagos State Residents Registration Agency identification alongside their tax records. The programme is not a general access scheme — it is a competitive initiative designed to identify and back startups with genuine potential.
Applications will be evaluated by a panel drawn from the Lagos startup ecosystem, scored out of 100 points across four criteria: market opportunity, founding team strength, level of traction already demonstrated, and third-party recommendations. A minimum score of 50 is required to qualify. While recommendations from experienced founders, investors, or ecosystem operators are listed as optional, the organisers are transparent that strong endorsements can meaningfully improve an applicant’s chances — a detail worth noting for founders who have relevant relationships and haven’t yet activated them.
The application deadline is May 20, 2026, through the official Lagos Innovates portal.
For founders currently operating out of cafés, shared apartments, or home setups — common realities for early-stage Nigerian startups — this programme represents a concrete, government-backed route to a more stable operational environment without the full cost burden that typically makes quality workspace inaccessible at the pre-revenue stage.
