The Budget Office of Nigeria shared a blueprint of Nigeria’s budget for the new year, revealing how much different sectors got and who got more funds in comparison to last year. The security sector, according to the fresh data, was allocated a whopping N6.69 trillion, a massive improvement from the N4.91 trillion allocated in 2025.
The leap in the budget for security in 2026 did not come as a surprise giving the various security challenges in the country. In the North East, fundamentalist terror groups like ISWAP, Boko Haram, Ansaru, JNIM, and local bandits operate on a full scale, draining resources and personnel from the Nigerian security architecture.
In the Middle Belt, armed herdsmen terrorise farming communities, destroying lives and crops, contributing to a food shortage, which is reflected in the prices of food in the market. This problem extends to the South West, where local communities have reported rape and murder cases by unidentified non-state actors.
In the Southeast and SouthSouth, kidnapping cases have plagued the region, with ransom money running into millions and victims killed in some cases.
In the north, an alleged Christian genocide is drawing international attention, prompting strong words and an airstrike from the United States.
These challenges stretch the Nigerian security architecture, taking a toll on resources and manpower. The N6.69 trillion bet is a frantic attempt to compensate an overstrained sector whose progress or failure affects every other sector in the country.
How will This Money Be spent?
BudgIT Nigeria, Nigeria’s foremost proprietary data firm, broke down the bulk N6.69 trillion budget and how it was allocated to various security entities in the sector. The breakdown gives us a fair sense of the national security priority and the pecking order that exists in Nigeria’s security sector.
The N6.69 trillion was shared among security entities in the following manner
- Defence – N3.15 trillion
- Ministry of Police Affairs – N1.33 trillion
- Service Wide Vote – N844.31 billion
- Interior ( Immigration, Civil Defence, etc.) – N696.42 billion
- National Security Adviser (NSA) – N664.12 billion
- Police Service Commission – N2.40 billion
Expected Impact and Security Projections
The N6.69 trillion security budget is Nigeria’s largest for the sector in years. The budget is expected to impact Nigeria’s security in many ways.
The injection of funds shifts Nigeria’s security projections from manpower expansion to a modernized, intelligence-led approach.
Key projections include a Unified Command eliminating inter-agency rivalry through synchronized operations between the Armed Forces and the Police. Other projections include Hardware modernization and a zero-tolerance stance for non-state actors.
Expected impact includes economic stability, following the securing of rural areas, prompting a resurgence by farmers. Others include an increase in FDI as improved safety attracts more investments from foreign bodies in the state.
Insecurity was the killshot that ended the reign of the People’s Democratic Party under Goodluck Jonathan in 2015. The beneficiary party and the current ruling party are facing similar demons, and their handling of the issues will decide whether it deserves to be Nigeria’s ruling party or if an imminent replacement will suffice in 2027.
