May 27, 2026
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Fuel hikes: Is ride-hailing becoming a luxury in Lagos?

Every weekday morning, Blessing Ade leaves her house in Lagos, Nigeria, carrying her baby in a wrap. The first-time mother, who lives in a two-story building, only steps outside when her ride is alrea

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ManyPress Editorial Team

ManyPress Editorial

May 26, 2026 · 2:47 PM3 min readSource: Deutsche Welle
Fuel hikes: Is ride-hailing becoming a luxury in Lagos?

Every weekday morning, Blessing Ade leaves her house in Lagos, Nigeria, carrying her baby in a wrap. The first-time mother, who lives in a two-story building, only steps outside when her ride is already waiting at the gate. "I book my ride before I step out of the house," she told DW.

"The ride has to be in front of my gate, not that I'm outside and then standing under the sun." For her, public buses are not an option. "Right now, I'm not thinking bus. I don't even see it as an option. I've canceled it." Rising fuel prices and fare surges are changing how ride‑hailing is used in Lagos. Some commuters say they rely on ride‑hailing more than ever, while others are cutting back, switching between apps or abandoning trips when prices rise. Fuel prices in Nigeria began rising sharply after President Bola Ahmed Tinubu announced the removal of the long-standing petrol subsidy during his inauguration speech on May 29, 2023. The spike significantly affected transportation, food prices and the overall cost of living in Africa's most populous nation. Pemi Aderogba, 29, who also lives in Lagos, a city that is home to an estimated 20 million people according to the UN , says ride‑hailing remains central to how she gets around. "Very often I feel like if I have to go out seven days a week, I would probably use them for six days or even all seven days," Aderogba, who works as a development professional, told DW. She combines different modes depending on the purpose. For work, she uses Shuttlers, an app for shared rides, and buses, but for most other trips, individual ride‑hailing dominates. "Most times when I'm going out, aside from work, I always use Uber and inDrive," she explained, adding that she stopped using one platform because "they became very expensive." To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video "It's just always about the distance and comfort for me," she stressed.

Key points

  • "The ride has to be in front of my gate, not that I'm outside and then standing under the sun." For her, public buses are not an option.
  • "Right now, I'm not thinking bus.
  • I don't even see it as an option.
  • I've canceled it." Rising fuel prices and fare surges are changing how ride‑hailing is used in Lagos.
  • Some commuters say they rely on ride‑hailing more than ever, while others are cutting back, switching between apps or abandoning trips when prices rise.

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This article was independently rewritten by ManyPress editorial AI from reporting originally published by Deutsche Welle.

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