Building a family home in Nigeria: what the diaspora gets wrong.
The dream is universal. A house back home. Something solid. Something yours. But between the dream and the finished building, there is a graveyard of abandoned projects, broken budgets, and damaged family relationships. Here is why, and how to do it differently.
Reading time
15 minutes
Published
May 2026
The dream and why it matters
For millions of Nigerians in the diaspora, building a house back home is not just a financial decision. It is an emotional one. It is proof of success. It is a retirement plan. It is a statement to the family, the village, and the community that you made it. It is a place where your children will know where they came from.
The World Bank estimates that Nigeria receives over $20 billion in annual remittances, making it the largest recipient of remittances in Sub-Saharan Africa. A significant proportion of that money goes into real estate - buying land, building homes, and funding construction projects.
The problem is not the dream. The dream is good. The problem is the execution. And the execution fails, over and over, for the same predictable reasons.
Mistake 1: The uncle manages the build
This is the single most common reason diaspora building projects fail. The pattern is almost always the same:
You decide to build a house in Nigeria
A family member - usually an uncle, a cousin, or a sibling - volunteers to "oversee" the project
You send money in instalments
The family member hires workers, buys materials, and manages the site
Progress is slow, costs escalate, and communication becomes difficult
Eventually, the money runs out before the house is finished, or the house is finished but the quality is terrible, or the project is abandoned halfway
Why this happens: Your uncle is not a project manager. He is not a construction professional. He has no experience managing budgets, procurement, or construction timelines. He is doing you a favour, and favours do not come with accountability structures.
He may be honest and well-intentioned. He may also be inflating costs, using cheaper materials than what you paid for, or simply not supervising the workers because he has his own job and life. You will never know because you are 5,000 miles away and your only source of information is the person spending your money.
The hard truth: When you ask your uncle to manage a ₦30M construction project, you are asking someone with no construction experience to do a job that professional project managers charge 10–15% of the build cost to do. The money you save by not hiring a professional is almost always less than the money you lose to waste, theft, rework, and delays.
Mistake 2: The budget is a guess
Most diaspora building projects start without a real budget. There is a vague number in someone's head - "about ₦25 million" or "around $30,000" - based on a conversation with a friend, an estimate from a local contractor, or a figure seen on the internet.
The reality of building costs in Nigeria (2026 estimates):
Medium finish (quality blocks, aluminium roofing, decent tiles, fitted kitchen)
₦300,000 – ₦450,000
High finish (reinforced concrete, quality fixtures, modern design, landscaping)
₦500,000 – ₦750,000+
A four-bedroom detached house with a net area of 250 sqm at medium finish would cost approximately ₦75M – ₦112M to build. Add land cost, fencing, external works, and professional fees, and you are well above ₦100M in a decent neighbourhood.
Costs people forget to budget for:
Foundation engineering (especially important in areas with clay or waterlogged soil)
Fencing and gatehouse
Borehole and water treatment
Septic tank or soakaway
Electrical installation and PHCN connection
Generator and changeover switch
External drainage
Professional fees (architect: 5–10%, structural engineer: 3–5%, project manager: 10–15%)
Building permit fees
Inflation - material prices in Nigeria can rise 20–40% in a single year
Mistake 3: Building on undocumented family land
"The land belongs to our family. We don't need documents." This sentence has destroyed more diaspora building projects than any other.
Family land in Nigeria - land that has been passed down through generations without formal documentation - is a legal minefield. Without a registered title (C of O or Governor's Consent), you have no legal protection. Your building can be challenged by other family members, by the community, or by the government.
Common scenarios:
You build on land that your father "owned," but there is no formal title. After your father dies, other family members claim the land and demand you share or vacate.
You build on communal land that the family said was "allocated" to you, but there is no formal allocation letter or survey. A different branch of the family sells the same land to someone else.
You build on family land and the state government acquires the area for development. Because there is no C of O, you receive no compensation.
What to do instead: Before you lay a single block, ensure the land has a registered title. If it is family land, push for a formal family resolution documented by a lawyer, followed by an application for a C of O or excision. Yes, this takes time and costs money. It costs far less than losing a completed building.
Mistake 4: No architect, no engineer, no permit
In the rush to start building, many diaspora projects skip the professionals entirely. A local draughtsman draws "the plan" on a sheet of paper, a mason starts laying blocks, and the house takes shape without any structural engineering, architectural design, or building permit.
What goes wrong:
Structural failure: Without a structural engineer's calculations, the foundation may be inadequate for the soil type, the columns may be undersized, or the roof span may exceed what the walls can support. Building collapse is not rare in Nigeria - the Building Collapse Prevention Guild (BCPG) has documented hundreds of incidents.
Poor space planning: A draughtsman's plan is not an architect's design. Rooms are awkwardly sized, corridors are wasted space, natural light is blocked, and the house does not function well for actual living.
No building permit: Building without a permit from the state planning authority is technically illegal. In practice, enforcement is uneven, but if you build without a permit and the government decides to enforce, they can issue a demolition order. More practically, you cannot insure an unpermitted building, and selling it later becomes difficult.
What to do instead: Hire a ARCON-registered architect (Architects Registration Council of Nigeria) to design your house. Hire a COREN-registered structural engineer (Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria) to design the structure. Apply for a building permit from the state planning authority. These professionals cost money, but they ensure your house stands up, works well, and is legal.
Mistake 5: Sending money in chunks with no accountability
The typical pattern: your family member or contractor calls and says "we need ₦2 million for blocks." You send it. Two weeks later: "we need ₦1.5 million for cement and sand." You send it. A month later: "the roofing sheets cost more than expected, we need another ₦3 million." You send it.
At no point do you see receipts, invoices, or photographs of the materials being delivered. At no point do you know whether the money you sent was actually spent on what they said it was spent on. At no point does anyone reconcile the total spent against the original budget, because there was no real budget to begin with.
What to do instead:
Hire a project manager or quantity surveyor who produces a detailed bill of quantities (BOQ) before construction starts. The BOQ lists every material, every quantity, and every cost.
Release funds against milestones, not against phone calls. Define milestones (foundation complete, walls at lintel level, roofing complete, plastering complete, finishing complete) and release payment only when each milestone is verified with photographs and a site inspection report.
Require receipts for everything. Every bag of cement, every delivery of sand, every payment to a labourer should be documented. A good project manager does this as standard practice.
Visit the site or have an independent person visit at least once per milestone. WhatsApp video calls are better than nothing, but they are not a substitute for a physical inspection.
Mistake 6: Expecting Lagos timelines in a Nigerian reality
A common expectation: "The house should be done in six months." The reality: a typical four-bedroom house in Nigeria takes 12 to 24 months from foundation to handover, assuming continuous funding and no major delays.
What causes delays:
Rainy season: Heavy rain halts foundation and blockwork. In the Southwest, the rainy season runs roughly April to October. Plan your build timeline around this.
Material shortages: Cement, reinforcement bars (rebar), and roofing materials periodically experience supply shortages and price spikes. Buying materials in advance (when you have storage) can mitigate this.
Labour availability: Good masons, electricians, and plumbers are in high demand. They may work on multiple sites simultaneously, slowing progress on yours.
Funding gaps: The most common cause of delay. When you send money in dribs and drabs, work stops between payments. Workers leave for other jobs. Restarting costs more than continuous work.
Scope creep: "Since we're building, let's add a boys' quarters." "Let's make the parlour bigger." "Let's upgrade the roof." Every change adds cost and time.
A realistic timeline:
Design and permits: 2–3 months
Foundation: 1–2 months
Block work to lintel: 2–3 months
Roofing: 1–2 months
Plastering and screeding: 1–2 months
Electrical and plumbing: 1–2 months (runs partially in parallel)
External works (fencing, drainage, landscaping): 1–2 months
Total: 12–20 months with continuous funding. Add 6–12 months if funding is intermittent.
The family problem nobody talks about
This is the section most articles about building in Nigeria leave out, because it is uncomfortable. But it is often the real reason projects fail.
When you build a house in Nigeria as a diaspora person, you are not just building a house. You are entering a web of family expectations, obligations, and dynamics that affect every decision.
Expectations you will face:
"You're building for yourself, what about your mother? What about your brother?" - pressure to build bigger than you planned, or to build additional structures for extended family
"Your cousin is a bricklayer, give him the contract" - pressure to hire family members regardless of their skill level
"The community expects a contribution before you build" - demands for "development levies" or "community fees" that may or may not be legitimate
"The house is too big for one person, let your sister's family stay there until you come back" - the house you built becomes communal property before you even move in
How to navigate this:
Set boundaries early. Before you start building, be clear about what you are building, who it is for, and who will live there. Communicate this to the family in writing, not just verbally.
Separate family obligations from business decisions. You can support your family financially without giving them control over a ₦100M construction project. Send contributions separately. Keep the build professional.
Hire professionals, not relatives. If your cousin is genuinely the best mason in town, fine. But hire him based on a formal contract, not a family obligation. If he is not qualified, hire someone who is and find another way to support your cousin.
Document ownership clearly. Ensure the land title and building permit are in your name (or your spouse's name), not a family member's. Register the property properly. This protects you legally if family dynamics change.
A better way to build
None of the above means you should not build in Nigeria. It means you should build differently than most people do. Here is the framework that works:
Start with the title. Do not build on land without a registered title. Full stop.
Hire an architect. Get a proper design. Get it costed by a quantity surveyor. Know the real budget before you start.
Hire a project manager. Someone who is accountable to you, not to your family. Someone who produces reports, photographs, and financial statements. Budget 10–15% of the build cost for this. It is the best money you will spend.
Fund in milestones. Do not send money on request. Define milestones, verify completion, then release funds. This is how professional construction works everywhere in the world.
Get a building permit. It takes time. It costs money. It protects you.
Document everything. Every payment. Every receipt. Every photograph. Every decision. This is your protection if anything goes wrong.
Visit or verify. If you can fly in twice during the build, do it at foundation stage and at roofing stage. If you cannot travel, arrange for independent inspections at each milestone.
Building a family home in Nigeria is one of the most meaningful things you can do. It is also one of the most complex. Treat it with the seriousness it deserves. Hire professionals. Set boundaries. Document everything. And do not let the dream of the house destroy the relationships that make the house worth building.
Or skip the stress entirely
Buy a home that's already being built right.
LivMalik Project I, Eden, is three four-bedroom homes in Ibadan, built by professionals, documented weekly, with milestone-linked payments. No uncle required.