Nigerian university lecturers earn significantly low salaries compared to their African counterparts, prompting ASUU to repeatedly demand urgent wage reviews amid warnings of possible strikes and concerns over brain drain in the education sector.


University lecturers in Nigeria remain among the lowest-paid academics in Africa, despite recent wage adjustments linked to the new national minimum wage. Reports indicate that a Nigerian professor earns an average monthly salary of about ₦500,000, which translates to roughly $4,400 annually—far below what professors earn in several other African countries.
A comparison of salaries across African public universities shows a significant gap. While a professor in Nigeria earns around $4,400 per year, a professor in South Africa earns more than $57,000 annually, highlighting the disparity in academic remuneration across the continent.
Under Nigeria’s Consolidated University Academic Salary Structure (CONUASS), lecturers’ gross monthly salaries are approximately:
Graduate Assistant: ₦125,000 – ₦138,020
Assistant Lecturer: ₦150,000 – ₦171,487
Lecturer II: ₦186,543 – ₦209,693
Lecturer I: ₦239,292 – ₦281,956
Senior Lecturer: ₦386,101 – ₦480,780
Reader: ₦436,392 – ₦522,212
Professor: ₦525,010 – ₦633,333
These figures are before statutory deductions, meaning actual take-home pay is lower.
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has repeatedly criticised the government for failing to adequately improve lecturers’ welfare. The union argues that while political office holders continue to receive salary increases and allowances, university lecturers have been largely neglected, a situation it says discourages academic excellence and drives talent away from the education sector.
Academic stakeholders have warned that failure to review salaries could trigger another round of industrial action. In 2025, a senior lecturer from University of Lagos urged the federal government to urgently address lecturers’ welfare to avoid future strikes.
In May 2026, ASUU also accused the federal government of delaying the implementation of agreements previously reached with the union, warning that continued neglect could disrupt activities in public universities nationwide.
Education experts note that Nigeria’s low academic salaries contribute to brain drain, as many lecturers seek better opportunities abroad. They argue that improving lecturers’ pay and working conditions is essential for strengthening the country’s higher education system and retaining qualified scholars.
The growing calls for salary reform reflect concerns that without meaningful action, Nigeria may continue to lose experienced academics while facing recurring labour disputes in its universities.
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