Britain’s New Visa Toll: A Push to Keep Nigerians at Home

There was a time when the British visa process was simply a test of patience and paperwork. Today, it has evolved into something else entirely, an economic chokehold designed to force Nigerians to think twice before crossing UK borders. With the new fee structure, the message is loud and clear: stay in your country and fix it.

Take a look at the figures. A six-month UK visa now stands at ₦410,000. For two years, you’ll cough up ₦1,088,000. A five-year multiple entry? ₦2,070,000. And if you’re bold enough to want ten years, that is ₦2,700,000; before you even add the hidden extras. Fast-track fees climb into the millions. A so-called “premium lounge” (which is ironically mandatory), gulps ₦150,000. A simple request to hold on to your passport during processing now costs ₦85,000. This isn’t visa processing; it is daylight extortion dressed in diplomatic attire.

And the requirements? An encyclopaedia of documents; bank statements, employment letters, tax clearance, company incorporation papers, marriage certificates, even your host’s utility bills. Add to that the option of paying ₦3 million just to get your visa in two days, and one begins to wonder if Britain is selling entry tickets to paradise or auctioning limited seats on Noah’s Ark.
But beyond the outrage lies the real subtext: the UK doesn’t want Nigerians. At least not the average Nigerian. They want us to stay at home, battle the power cuts, endure our broken roads, queue endlessly for fuel, and somehow rebuild a nation we have been running away from. Britain is politely, and expensively, telling us: fix your country, because you can no longer afford to run here every holiday, conference, or medical trip.

It is worth asking why the UK is singling out Nigerians with such punitive costs. Is it because we apply in overwhelming numbers? Is it because remittances have turned migration into Nigeria’s biggest export? Or is it because Britain has finally realised that behind every young Nigerian with a visa application is one more skilled worker they can’t keep out forever, so they raise the bar to only the wealthiest?

What is tragic is not just the exploitation, but our helpless acceptance. Every time Nigerians troop to pay millions for visas, we reinforce the message that we are desperate, that we value escape more than reform, and that Britain can charge us anything because we will still line up.

This is not just about travel; it is about dignity. If the UK is forcing us to stay, then perhaps we should take the hint. Let us redirect the same millions spent on “premium lounges” and “fast-track” bribes into building hospitals, schools, and tech hubs. Let us channel the energy wasted on compiling visa paperwork into demanding accountability from those who wreck our country. The British government has just presented Nigeria with a painful but clear ultimatum: if you don’t fix your home, you will pay through your nose to leave it.

And maybe, just maybe, that is the nudge we need.

Dr. EK Gwuru writes from Nkolo Ikembe