When formal employment cannot keep up, Nigerians find another way. A new report from Bolt, conducted in partnership with research firm Ipsos, has put hard numbers to what many already knew: that millions of Nigerians have quietly built livelihoods outside the traditional job market, one gig at a time.
The Numbers
Nigeria’s gig economy is now valued at nearly $5.2 billion, with three million Nigerians operating within it. That figure comfortably outpaces Kenya’s 1.55 million gig workers and South Africa’s two million, making Nigeria the most active gig economy on the continent by participation.
E-commerce leads with 38% of total gig workers, followed by ride-hailing at 24%, freelancing at 19%, and micro tasks and remote work each accounting for 10%. Platform-based work now contributes approximately 2.8% to Nigeria’s GDP, a figure that will only grow as more people are pushed into the informal digital economy.
Adaptation, Not Aspiration
With over 92% of employed Nigerians operating outside formal wage structures, gig work is increasingly emerging as a practical solution for income generation, particularly in periods of economic uncertainty.
This is not a story about entrepreneurial ambition alone. It is a story about people responding intelligently to a system that has not created enough formal jobs to absorb them. Nigeria’s national unemployment rate has declined to 2.99%, but youth unemployment remains higher at 5.05%, pushing more young people to explore gig work alongside education, entrepreneurship, and migration plans.
Gig work is acting as a shock absorber in Nigeria’s economy, taking in workers the formal system cannot absorb and giving them a way to earn, however uneven that income may be.
Ride-Hailing as a Long-Term Play
Perhaps the most important finding concerns the longevity of gig participation. 59% of ride-hailing participants remain active on platforms for more than one year, indicating sustained reliance on the sector rather than short-term or transitional engagement.
More than 85% of ride-hailing transactions are now cashless, giving drivers access to banking records, loans, and digital financial tools, pulling a segment of Nigeria’s informal workforce closer to the financial system.
The Cracks Underneath
The numbers tell a hopeful story, but the lived experience is more complicated. Fuel prices in Nigeria have risen from under ₦1,000 to over ₦1,200 per litre in 2026, and rising vehicle maintenance costs, naira depreciation, and fixed platform commissions are squeezing drivers’ margins. While 64% of surveyed participants said their standard of living had improved, drivers also described working longer hours just to stay afloat.
There is also a gender problem the industry has yet to seriously address. Women account for just 3% of ride-hailing participants, a gap that limits both the sector’s inclusion credentials and its overall economic potential.
The Bigger Picture
Nigeria’s gig economy did not grow because conditions were ideal. It grew because Nigerians adapted. That adaptability is a genuine economic asset, but it cannot substitute indefinitely for policy frameworks that protect workers, reduce operational costs, and create a path to sustainable income. Bolt’s Head of Regulatory and Policy for Africa, Weyinmi Aghadiuno, called on the government to support local vehicle assembly, access to spare parts, affordable repair services, and wider digital infrastructure, which are the building blocks that would allow this informal resilience to become something more durable.












