WanderSafe — LGBTQ+ Travel Safety
Lagos, Nigeria
Nigeria is one of the most dangerous countries in the world for LGBTQ+ people. The Same Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act 2014 (SSMPA) criminalizes same-sex relationships with up to 14 years imprisonment and penalizes LGBTQ+ organizations and public displays of affection with up to 10 years. In 12 northern states operating under Sharia law, same-sex sexual activity carries the death penalty by stoning. Mob violence against suspected LGBTQ+ individuals is well-documented, and police routinely extort and abuse LGBTQ+ Nigerians.
Lagos, Nigeria is rated High Risk for LGBTQ+ travelers. Same-sex relations may be criminalized. Read the full assessment below before traveling.
Safety by Community
Confidence C · LGBTQ+ data as of 2026-06-18
- LGBTQ+ 20 (High Risk)
- Trans 18 (High Risk)
- HIV+ 36 (High Risk)
- Neurodivergent — not yet scored
- Blind / Low-vision — not yet scored
- Deaf / HoH — not yet scored ⚠
- Mobility — not yet scored ⚠
- Chronic illness — not yet scored
- Religious minorities 71 (Generally Safe)
Travel Warnings
Taboo topics: serious restriction
LGBTQ+ advocacy and 'public show of same-sex amorous relationship' are criminalized under the Same-Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act with up to 10–14 years; in northern Sharia states blasphemy can carry the death penalty — a person has been sentenced to death over a WhatsApp message. Know this before you travel.
Source: https://www.state.gov/reports/2023-country-reports-on-human-rights-practices/nigeria/ · verified 2026-06-18
Accessibility barrier: text-to-911
Nigeria's emergency number (112) is voice-call only; Lagos emergency response (LASEMA/767/112) provides no text-to-emergency or SMS/relay channel for deaf or non-speaking callers. Plan around this before you travel.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emergency_telephone_numbers · verified 2026-06-18
Accessibility barrier: step-free public transit
The Lagos BRT is the closest to accessible public transport in Nigeria, but disability-marked seats are usually taken, buses are overcrowded, ramps are often non-functional, and staff are frequently untrained to help wheelchair users board. Informal transport (danfo minibuses) is inaccessible. Newer vehicles with a single sloped step are only gradually replacing older buses. Plan around this before you travel.
Source: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2950196226000025 · verified 2026-06-17
Legal Status
Nigeria maintains one of the harshest anti-LGBTQ+ legal frameworks globally. Federal criminal law, the 2014 SSMPA, and Sharia law in northern states create overlapping layers of criminalization with no protections whatsoever.
How these scores are computed
- Legal 3 — derived from 4 verified indicators (85% coverage)
- Safety 8 — legacy number, re-verification in progress
- Community 12 — legacy number, re-verification in progress
- Infrastructure 8 — legacy number, re-verification in progress
Anchors, weights, and the full formula are published in the methodology.
Emergency Contacts
112
112
+234-1-277-0780 · www.gov.uk/world/organisations/british-deputy-high-commission-lagos
theinitiativeforequalrights.org
outrightinternational.org
Local Resources & Who to Contact
Vetted organizations and helplines that can assist travelers here. In countries where this community is criminalized, contact notes flag how to reach out safely.
+2348146337128 · theinitiativeforequalrights.org
Lagos-based registered NGO providing free legal representation, human-rights documentation and 24/7 psychosocial counselling hotlines for LGBTQI+ people facing arrest, blackmail (kito) or violence; given the SSMPA climate, contact discreetly and avoid disclosing identifying details over unsecured channels.
whernigeria.org
Lesbian/bisexual/queer-women-led organization addressing the health, mental-health and rights needs of LBQ women in Nigeria, including documentation of discrimination; reach out by email rather than in person given the criminalizing environment.
heartlandalliancenigeria.org
Major USAID/PEPFAR HIV implementer running key-population 'one-stop shop' clinics and drop-in centres (testing, ART, PrEP/PEP) discreetly serving LGBTQI+ people, sex workers and people who inject drugs; a confidential entry point for HIV prevention and treatment.
nepwhan.org
National umbrella network for people living with HIV, with state chapters (including Lagos) offering peer support, treatment-access advocacy and referral; useful for navigating ART continuity and stigma/discrimination issues. State office contacts are published at nepwhan.org/contact-us-2/.
lsaca.net
Lagos State government agency coordinating the city's HIV/AIDS response, including free HIV testing initiatives and referral to treatment sites across Lagos; a mainstream, publicly-listed channel for locating HIV testing and care in the city.
outrightinternational.org
International LGBTIQ rights organization that monitors Nigeria, publishes safety guidance and connects in-country people with emergency support and documentation; safer to contact from outside the country and does not require disclosing your location to read its guidance.
Identity-Specific Guidance
Trans Women
Extreme risk. Trans women face the most acute danger of all identity groups.
Trans women in Nigeria face extreme violence, including mob attacks, sexual assault, and extrajudicial killings. High visibility makes concealment nearly impossible for many trans women. There is no legal gender recognition, and cross-dressing is prosecutable. Police are active perpetrators of violence against trans women. Healthcare for transition-related needs is nonexistent. Travel to Nigeria as a trans woman carries life-threatening risk and is strongly discouraged.
Trans Men
Extreme risk. Discovery of trans status leads to severe violence.
Trans men who pass as cisgender may initially attract less attention, but any discovery of trans status carries extreme risk of violence, arrest, and sexual assault. Identity document mismatches create danger at checkpoints and official interactions, which are frequent in Lagos. No legal framework for gender transition exists. Binding and other practices must be completely concealed. Medical emergencies requiring hospital care pose disclosure risk.
Gay Men
Extreme risk. Primary target of SSMPA enforcement and mob violence.
Gay men are the primary targets of Nigeria's anti-LGBTQ+ laws. The SSMPA has been used to justify mass arrests, police raids on private gatherings, and dating app entrapment operations. Mob violence is a persistent threat. Blackmail and extortion by police, military, and civilians is pervasive. Even suspicion of homosexuality can trigger violent responses. Avoid all same-sex intimacy, dating apps, and any behavior that could be perceived as non-heterosexual.
Lesbian & Bi Women
Extreme risk. Targeted by both state law and family/community violence.
Lesbians face prosecution under the SSMPA with penalties up to 14 years. While police enforcement has historically focused more on men, women are not exempt. Corrective rape is a documented risk, particularly from family members. Forced marriage is used as a 'cure.' Masculine-presenting women face heightened scrutiny and violence. The extreme patriarchal social structure means women have fewer resources to flee dangerous situations.
Nonbinary Travelers
Extreme risk. Gender non-conformity triggers immediate hostile attention.
Nonbinary identity has no legal or social recognition in Nigeria. Gender non-conforming presentation is treated as evidence of homosexuality and provokes violent responses. Nigerian culture enforces rigid gender roles, and any deviation is perceived as threatening. Maintain strictly gender-conforming appearance at all times. There are no support services, legal protections, or safe spaces for nonbinary individuals.