If you’re looking to experience some of Africa’s centuries-old traditions, then Nigeria should be top of your list.
In the northern half of the country, indigenous architecture with elaborate motifs and emirates steeped in ancient history are a constant attraction for visitors; in the south, you can explore vibrant markets, caves, waterfalls and be part of a long list of festivals.
And if you’re all about contemporary culture, good news: Nigeria’s creative industry is at the height of its growth and global influence. Nollywood, the home-grown movie industry, has kept Africans entertained for decades, and Nigerian youthful artists are exporting Afrobeat sounds and performing to sold-out shows worldwide.
Nigeria has no high or low season – any time of the year is good to visit. However, you can experience Nigeria at its best in the second half of the year when the rainy season has reached its peak and the dry season is gradually easing in.
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August is also when the Badagry Heritage Festival is held. This celebration of the culture and heritage of the Egun people also includes a memorial march for the millions lost to slavery through the Badagry port. The high point of this gathering is the fitila procession, during which participants attempt to recreate the painful march to the Point of no Return. In previous years, there have been naming ceremonies for Africans in the diaspora who attend.
The Osun-Osogbo festival, a two-week cultural fiesta in honor of the river goddess Osun, peaks with a grand procession in the third week of August. For decades it has drawn devotees from Europe, South America and the African diaspora. Outside of the festival, you can tour the Osun Osogbo Sacred Grove, a Unesco World Heritage Site.
Up north, there are the elaborate Durbar festivals, the biggest usually staged during the Eid el Kabir celebrations. They are grand equestrian spectacles, a tradition that has been kept alive for at least a century.
In November, Nigeria is overflowing with events in the creative arts. From film and theater festivals to fashion and literary gatherings, Lagos is where most of them take place. It typically begins in mid-October with Felabration, a week of nightly concerts in honor of Fela Anikulapo Kuti, founder of the Afrobeats movement and one of the country’s most notable cultural exports. It’s followed almost immediately by the Muson Festival, which promotes the appreciation of classical music.
November kicks off with Art X Lagos, an international fair celebrating the creative geniuses of artists on the continent and in the diaspora; the month ends with Lagos Books and Arts Festival (LABAF), billed as the “biggest book party in Africa”. But if you’re around in the early months of the year, you can attend the Kaduna Arts and Books Festival (March) or the Jos Festival of Theatre (April), which has been running for two decades and pulls a crowd.
Of course, there’s plenty in-between: the Lagos Fashion Week, Lagos Poetry Festival, Design Week Lagos and Lagos Fringe Festival, all establishing the unrivaled status of Lagos as Nigeria’s creative hub. For comics and animation buffs, be sure to target the Lagos Comin Con and Renda Con (Animation & Visual Effects Film Festival).
If you’re looking to immerse yourself in the Afrobeats frenzy, then buy tickets to concerts scheduled throughout the month. The party peaks and ends with the One Lagos Fiesta, a state-sponsored concert hosted in the city’s five administrative regions. Down south, in Cross River State, the annual Calabar Carnival pulls participants from Nigeria and a couple of other countries, and is the highlight of a month-long series of events.