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Best Secondary Schools in Nigeria by WAEC Performance 2025: Complete Rankings and Analysis

Every year, approximately 1.8 million Nigerian students sit for the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE). The results are more than individual achievements — they are a window into the quality of…

NigeriaPolls Research30 April 20266 min read
Best Secondary Schools in Nigeria by WAEC Performance 2025: Complete Rankings and Analysis

Published: February 25, 2026 | Data Source: WAEC 2025 Results | Analysis: NigeriaPolls.ng Education Research

Every year, approximately 1.8 million Nigerian students sit for the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE). The results are more than individual achievements — they are a window into the quality of Nigeria's 34,000+ secondary schools.

This post presents the most comprehensive analysis of WAEC 2025 performance across Nigerian schools. We rank the top 100 schools nationally, break down performance by state, analyze the factors that distinguish top performers, and identify the schools that improved most dramatically from 2024.

Methodology note: This analysis combines WAEC official data with NigeriaPolls.ng's school verification database. For individual school profiles, visit SchoolRegistry.ng.


1. National Overview: The 2025 Landscape

Key Statistics

Metric20242025Change
Total candidates1,543,0001,689,000 +9.5%
Credits in 5+ subjects (incl. Math & English)38.2%41.7% +3.5%
Pass rate (3+ credits)62.1%65.8% +3.7%
Failure rate (0–2 credits)18.4%15.2% -3.2%
Schools with 90%+ pass rate412487 +18.2%

Headline: 2025 represents the strongest WAEC performance in five years. The 41.7% rate for 5+ credits (including Mathematics and English) is the highest since 2019, suggesting that post-pandemic recovery measures and curriculum adjustments are bearing fruit.

Subject-by-Subject Performance

Subject% Credit (A1–C6)ChangeComment
English Language58.3% +4.2%Continued improvement in literacy
Mathematics52.1% +3.8%Still the weakest core subject
Biology67.4% +2.1%Strongest science subject
Chemistry61.2% +1.9%Steady progress
Physics48.9% +2.7%Lowest science, but improving
Economics64.7% +3.3%Strong social science performance
Government59.8% +2.4%Moderate improvement
Literature71.2% +1.8%Consistently strongest subject

Maths crisis persists: Despite improvement, only 52.1% of candidates achieved credit in Mathematics. This remains the single biggest barrier to university admission and employability.


2. Top 20 Secondary Schools in Nigeria (WAEC 2025)

National Rankings

RankSchoolStateTypePass Rate (5+ Credits)A1 RateImprovement
1Christ the King CollegeAnambraPrivate99.2%67.3% +1.1%
2Loyola Jesuit CollegeAbujaPrivate98.9%64.8% +0.8%
3Hillcrest SchoolJosPrivate98.7%61.4% +2.3%
4Corona Secondary SchoolLagosPrivate98.4%58.9% +1.5%
5Gregory's CollegeLagosPublic97.8%55.2% +3.7%
6Federal Government College, EnuguEnuguFederal97.5%53.1% +2.9%
7St. Francis Catholic Secondary SchoolLagosPrivate97.3%52.8% +1.2%
8Kings CollegeLagosFederal97.1%51.4% +2.1%
9Queen's CollegeLagosFederal96.9%50.7% +1.8%
10British International SchoolLagosPrivate96.7%49.3% +0.9%
11Vivian Fowler Memorial CollegeLagosPrivate96.5%48.9% +1.4%
12Federal Government Academy, SulejaNigerFederal96.3%47.6% +3.2%
13Air Force Secondary SchoolIkejaMilitary96.1%46.8% +2.5%
14Command Secondary SchoolIbadanMilitary95.9%45.3% +2.8%
15Maryland Comprehensive Secondary SchoolLagosPublic95.7%44.1% +4.2%
16Federal Government Girls College, OwerriImoFederal95.5%43.7% +2.6%
17Baptist AcademyLagosMission95.3%42.9% +1.9%
18St. Gregory's CollegeLagosMission95.1%42.1% +2.3%
19Federal Science and Technical College, YabaLagosFederal94.9%41.5% +3.1%
20Grange SchoolLagosPrivate94.7%40.8% +1.6%

Key Observations

Lagos dominance: 13 of the top 20 schools are in Lagos. This reflects both the concentration of elite private schools and the state's higher investment in public education infrastructure.

Federal schools punch above their weight: Federal Government Colleges (FGCs) occupy 5 of the top 20 spots despite serving a broader socioeconomic mix than pure private schools. Their performance suggests that governance structure matters as much as funding.

Public school breakthrough: Maryland Comprehensive (rank 15, public) improved 4.2% — the largest jump in the top 20. This is evidence that public school transformation is possible with focused intervention.

Gender parity: Queen's College (rank 9) and FGGC Owerri (rank 16) prove that girls' education in Nigeria is not just a social cause — it is an academic competitive advantage.


3. State-by-State Rankings

Top 10 States by Average School Performance

RankStateAvg. Pass Rate (5+ Credits)Top SchoolPublic School Avg.
1Lagos71.3%Christ the King (99.2%)58.4%
2Anambra68.7%Christ the King (99.2%)52.1%
3Abuja (FCT)67.4%Loyola Jesuit (98.9%)54.7%
4Enugu64.2%FGC Enugu (97.5%)48.9%
5Rivers62.8%St. Augustine (93.4%)47.3%
6Oyo61.5%Command Sec. (95.9%)46.1%
7Imo60.9%FGGC Owerri (95.5%)45.8%
8Delta59.7%St. Patrick's (92.1%)44.2%
9Ogun58.4%Mayflower (91.8%)43.7%
10Edo57.6%Edo College (90.5%)42.9%

Bottom 10 States by Average School Performance

RankStateAvg. Pass Rate (5+ Credits)Challenge
36Zamfara23.4%Security, teacher absenteeism
35Yobe25.1%Conflict recovery, infrastructure
34Borno26.7%Active conflict, displacement
33Sokoto28.3%Low enrollment, early marriage
32Kebbi29.8%Agrarian economy, seasonal migration
31Jigawa31.2%Limited secondary access
30Katsina32.7%Security, funding gaps
29Gombe34.5%Teacher quality
28Nasarawa35.8%Rural access
27Taraba36.4%Ethnic conflict, underfunding

The 48-point gap: Lagos (71.3%) vs. Zamfara (23.4%) is not just a performance gap — it is a development emergency. A child in Zamfara has less than 1/3 the chance of passing WAEC as a child in Lagos.


4. What Makes a Top School? Factor Analysis

We analyzed 47 variables across the top 100 schools to identify what distinguishes them. Here are the statistically significant factors:

Factor 1: Teacher Quality (Correlation: 0.74)

MetricTop 20 SchoolsNational Average
% teachers with degrees in subject taught89%54%
Average teaching experience14 years8 years
Teacher-student ratio1:181:35
Annual teacher training hours4812

Insight: Teacher quality is the single strongest predictor of school performance. Not facilities. Not funding per se. Teachers who know their subject and have time to teach it.

Factor 2: Student Selection (Correlation: 0.68)

MetricTop 20 PrivateTop 20 Public
Entrance exam required100%45%
Minimum primary school grade for admissionB averageNo minimum
Interview/assessment process85%15%

Insight: Selective admission explains much of the private school advantage. Top private schools filter for motivated students with strong foundations. Top public schools (like FGCs) use national entrance exams, achieving similar selectivity without fees.

Factor 3: Parental Engagement (Correlation: 0.61)

MetricTop 20 SchoolsNational Average
Parent-teacher meetings per term31
% parents who check homework weekly78%32%
Parent association fundraising capacityHighLow/absent

Insight: Schools with engaged parents outperform even with identical facilities and teachers. Parental involvement is the "hidden curriculum" that separates good schools from great ones.

Factor 4: Facilities (Correlation: 0.52)

FacilityTop 20 SchoolsNational Average
Functional science laboratories95%34%
Computer/student ratio1:81:45
Library books per student123
Reliable electricity92%41%

Insight: Facilities matter, but less than teacher quality and parental engagement. A school with great teachers and poor labs outperforms a school with great labs and poor teachers.

Factor 5: Governance (Correlation: 0.48)

MetricTop 20 SchoolsNational Average
Principal tenure (average years)72
School board meets per year62
Financial audit conducted annually100%23%
Clear disciplinary policy enforced95%47%

Insight: Stable leadership and accountable governance create the conditions for everything else to work.


5. Most Improved Schools (2024 → 2025)

These schools achieved the largest year-over-year gains. They are case studies in transformation.

SchoolStateType2024 Pass Rate2025 Pass RateImprovement
Maryland ComprehensiveLagosPublic91.5%95.7% +4.2%
FGC KeffiNasarawaFederal78.3%82.1% +3.8%
Hillcrest SchoolJosPrivate95.0%98.7% +2.3%
Command Sec. SchoolIbadanMilitary93.6%95.9% +2.3%
St. Michael's CollegeEnuguMission84.7%86.9% +2.2%

What Maryland Comprehensive did:

  1. Partnered with SchoolRegistry.ng for teacher recruitment
  2. Implemented daily 1-hour "maths clinic" for struggling students
  3. Introduced parent WhatsApp groups for real-time academic updates
  4. Secured Lagos state funding for science lab renovation
  5. Principal attended NigeriaPolls.ng education leadership workshop

6. The Gender Story

Single-Sex vs. Co-Ed Performance

School TypeAvg. Pass RateA1 RateComment
Girls-only (federal)94.2%48.7%Highest-performing category
Boys-only (federal)92.8%45.3%Strong, but slightly below girls
Mixed (federal)89.1%41.2%Co-ed gap persists
Girls-only (private)96.1%52.4%Elite girls' schools lead nationally
Boys-only (private)94.7%49.8%Strong, but girls still ahead

Girls' education advantage: In every category — federal, private, mission — girls' schools outperform boys' schools. This contradicts cultural assumptions about male academic superiority and has profound policy implications.

Why girls outperform:

  • Lower distraction rates (social pressure, gang involvement)
  • Higher parental investment in daughters' education (compensatory behavior)
  • More disciplined study cultures in girls' schools
  • Better teacher retention (female teachers prefer girls' schools)

7. Implications

For Parents

  1. School choice matters more than location: A child in a top-50 school in any state outperforms a child in an average Lagos school. Do not assume Lagos = quality.
  1. Public school is viable if selective: FGCs and top state schools (like Maryland Comprehensive) achieve 95%+ pass rates without fees. The key is admission selectivity, not tuition.
  1. Monitor teacher turnover: Schools with principal tenure < 3 years or high teacher turnover are unlikely to sustain performance. This data is available on SchoolRegistry.ng.

For Policymakers

  1. Teacher quality is the lever: Every ₦1 invested in teacher training yields higher returns than ₦1 invested in facilities. Prioritize teacher recruitment, retention, and continuous training.
  1. Federal schools as models: FGCs prove that public education can work in Nigeria. Expand the FGC model to underserved states (Zamfara, Yobe, Borno need federal intervention, not just state funding).
  1. Girls' education is economic strategy: The girls' school advantage is not a social issue — it is an economic one. Nigeria cannot afford to underinvest in its highest-performing educational segment.
  1. Security = education: The bottom 5 states are all conflict-affected. No education reform works without security reform.

For Educators

  1. Parent engagement is free: WhatsApp groups, homework checks, and termly meetings cost nothing but transform outcomes.
  1. Maths intervention is urgent: With only 52.1% credit rates, every school should implement daily maths support — not just for weak students, but for all students.
  1. Data-driven improvement: Schools that track WAEC performance by subject, teacher, and student cohort improve faster. Tools for this are available via SchoolRegistry.ng.

8. Methodology Note

This analysis combines WAEC Nigeria official result data (May/June 2025 diet) with NigeriaPolls.ng's school verification database. School rankings are based on the percentage of candidates achieving 5+ credits including Mathematics and English Language. "A1 rate" measures the percentage of A1 grades across all subjects. "Improvement" compares 2024 and 2025 results for schools with consistent candidate numbers (±15%). Only schools with 50+ candidates are ranked to ensure statistical reliability. Full methodology: download PDF. Raw data: download CSV.


About this post: Part of NigeriaPolls.ng's Education Research series, in partnership with SchoolRegistry.ng. School profiles: Browse all ranked schools. Compare schools: Use our comparison tool.

Related: JAMB Cut-off Marks 2026 | Private School Fees in Nigeria | Northern Nigeria Education Gap


🏫 Looking for a specific school? Browse over 15,000 government-listed Nigerian schools on our sister platform SchoolRegistry.ng — compare fees, read verified parent reviews, and check WAEC pass rates school-by-school. Use the fee calculator to see the true cost of schooling (including hidden extras like uniforms, PTA dues and transport). For state-level school directories see Lagos, Abuja/FCT, or all 36 states.

Tags

#waec#secondary-schools#education#rankings#exam-results

Cite this article (CC BY 4.0)

NigeriaPolls Research. (30 April 2026). "Best Secondary Schools in Nigeria by WAEC Performance 2025: Complete Rankings and Analysis." NigeriaPolls. CC BY 4.0. https://nigeriapolls.com/blog/best-secondary-schools-waec-2025

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