KEY POINTS
- Nigeria’s National Single Window launches March 27, 2026 after nationwide sensitisation.
- The platform will connect all trade agencies through one digital entry point.
- It will co-exist with the Customs Service’s existing B’Odogwu platform.
Nigeria’s most significant trade digitalisation effort in years is two weeks away from launch, and the people who will use it daily are only now learning what it actually does.
The National Single Window Secretariat, working alongside the Nigeria Customs Service, wrapped up a three-city sensitisation tour this week covering Lagos, Port Harcourt, and Kano, targeting customs officers, freight forwarders, port operators, importers, exporters, and logistics professionals ahead of the March 27, 2026 go-live date.
The Nigeria Single Window trade platform pulls Nigeria’s fragmented import and export processes into a single digital environment, replacing the current system in which traders must approach multiple government agencies separately, each with its own documentation requirements and approval timelines.
What Changes and What Stays
Director of the National Single Window Secretariat, Tola Fakolade, described it as more than a software upgrade.
The Nigeria Single Window trade platform unifies Nigeria’s fragmented import and export processes into a single digital environment, eliminating the need for traders to approach multiple government agencies separately, each with its own documentation requirements and approval timelines.
One of the most practical questions raised during the sessions was whether the new platform would replace the Customs Service’s existing B’Odogwu system. Fakolade said it would not. The Nigeria Single Window trade hub is intended to sit above existing platforms as a central coordinating layer, routing traders and regulators through a single digital entry point without dismantling the systems agencies already rely on.
“The National Single Window will co-exist and collaborate with the Customs B’Odogwu platform. Rather than replace existing systems, it will serve as the central coordinating hub that connects all relevant trade systems and agencies into one seamless digital environment,” he explained.
Industry Groups Express Cautious Support
The two-day format in each city split sessions between government officers on day one and private sector stakeholders on day two. Associations including the National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders, the Association of Nigerian Licensed Customs Agents, and the Importers Association of Nigeria all participated.
Leaders of these bodies welcomed the consultation approach, though they noted that the success of the initiative would ultimately depend on genuine collaboration between agencies, not just on how developers designed the platform. Representatives from the private sector used the sessions to ask detailed questions and watch live demonstrations of how the system would process permits and other documentation.
Fakolade finally said the platform had completed extensive testing ahead of schedule and that every preparatory step had been taken to ensure a clean rollout on March 27.


