Key Points
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FG and ASUU sign a new agreement to end years of unstable university calendars
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Lecturers get 40% pay rise and clearer welfare benefits from January 2026
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Deal raises hope for fewer strikes and more stable learning for students
For more than 20 years, public universities in Nigeria have struggled with one big problem. Strikes. Classes stop suddenly. Students stay at home for months. School calendars lose meaning. Many students feel stuck and frustrated.
A New Agreement After Long Talks
On Wednesday, January 14, 2026, something different happened in Abuja. The Federal Government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, reached a new agreement.
Many people now see it as one of the most important deals ever made in Nigeria’s university system.
The 2025 FG–ASUU Agreement was not just another document signing. It was a sign that both sides may be ready to move on from years of tension and broken promises.
Speaking at the event, Minister of Education, Dr Tunji Alausa, said the agreement marked a turning point. He said it showed new trust between the government and university lecturers.
For years, talks between ASUU and different governments often failed. Agreements were signed but not fully carried out.
This led to repeated strikes that disrupted the lives of students and parents across the country.
This time, the mood was different.
Government Role And Salary Increase
Alausa said President Bola Tinubu played a key role by staying involved and pushing both sides to reach a final decision.
He said it was the first time in many years that a sitting president showed steady interest in ending the long ASUU crisis.
One major part of the agreement is a 40 percent increase in lecturers’ salaries. The raise will start from January 1, 2026. For many lecturers struggling with rising prices and living costs, this was welcome news.
The deal also changes how lecturers are paid. Their salary will now include better support for research work, books, internet access, conferences and academic tools.
Some special allowances have also been clearly explained and linked to actual work done, such as supervising students, marking exams and holding leadership roles.
For the first time, professors and readers will also receive a special allowance. Professors will earn N1.74 million yearly, while readers will get N840,000. The government says this recognises the heavy workload carried by senior academics.
ASUU Response And Ongoing Concerns
ASUU President, Professor Chris Piwuna, said the agreement came after many years of failed talks. He said earlier governments lacked sincerity and allowed negotiations to drag on.
According to him, the new deal addresses key issues like funding, university freedom, working conditions and the need to stop the loss of skilled lecturers to other countries.
Still, ASUU raised concerns. Piwuna warned that university independence is still weak.
He accused governments of interfering in the appointment of vice-chancellors and dissolving governing councils without good reason.
He also spoke about research funding, saying Nigeria needs to invest more in research if universities are to improve.
Plans are already in place to push for a law that will set aside part of the country’s income for research.
What The Agreement Means Going Forward
Minister of State for Education, Professor Suwaiba Ahmad, said the agreement mattered deeply to her as a lecturer. She said constant strikes had damaged teaching, research and mentoring over the years.
She said if the agreement is properly carried out, it will bring peace to campuses, improve learning and give students a stable school calendar.
As the event ended, many people felt hopeful but careful.
Students and parents want the government to keep its word. Lecturers want respect and better working conditions. For the government, the real test will be action, not speeches.
If fully implemented, the FG–ASUU agreement could finally help Nigerian universities move past strikes and return to stable learning.


