Naira Confidence Tracker Q1 2026: Full Analysis of Nigerian Currency Sentiment
The Naira has been Nigeria's economic barometer, political football, and daily anxiety for decades. In Q1 2026, as the currency navigates another cycle of volatility, NigeriaPolls.ng conducted its most comprehensive…
Published: February 15, 2026 | Poll: n=2,047 | Margin of Error: ±2.2% | Field Dates: February 10–14, 2026
The Naira has been Nigeria's economic barometer, political football, and daily anxiety for decades. In Q1 2026, as the currency navigates another cycle of volatility, NigeriaPolls.ng conducted its most comprehensive currency sentiment survey to date.
The results reveal a population deeply divided by geography, age, and economic class — but united in one belief: the Naira's stability is inseparable from Nigeria's stability.
This post presents the full analysis, including state-by-state breakdowns, demographic cross-tabs, and implications for policymakers, investors, and citizens.
1. The Headline Numbers
Overall Sentiment
| Response | Percentage | Margin of Error |
|---|---|---|
| Very confident | 18% | ±1.8% |
| Somewhat confident | 34% | ±2.1% |
| Not confident | 38% | ±2.1% |
| No opinion | 10% | ±1.3% |
Net confidence (very + somewhat): 52%
Net pessimism (not confident): 38%
Key finding: Despite headline pessimism in financial media, a narrow majority of Nigerians retain some confidence in the Naira's long-term stability. However, the 38% "not confident" segment is the largest single bloc — and it is growing.
Historical Context
| Quarter | Net Confidence | Change |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 2025 | 61% | Baseline |
| Q2 2025 | 55% | ▼ -6% |
| Q3 2025 | 48% | ▼ -7% |
| Q4 2025 | 45% | ▼ -3% |
| Q1 2026 | 52% | ▲ +7% |
Interpretation: After four consecutive quarters of declining confidence, Q1 2026 shows a modest recovery. This likely reflects the CBN's recent intervention policies and seasonal optimism post-holiday. Whether this is a trend reversal or a temporary bounce remains to be seen.
2. State-by-State Breakdown
Confidence is not evenly distributed. Our state-level analysis reveals sharp geographic divides:
Most Confident States (Top 5)
| Rank | State | Net Confidence | Sample (n) | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lagos | 72% | 312 | ±5.6% |
| 2 | FCT (Abuja) | 68% | 198 | ±7.0% |
| 3 | Rivers | 58% | 156 | ±7.8% |
| 4 | Oyo | 55% | 134 | ±8.5% |
| 5 | Delta | 53% | 98 | ±9.9% |
Least Confident States (Bottom 5)
| Rank | State | Net Confidence | Sample (n) | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 36 | Kano | 28% | 298 | ±5.7% |
| 35 | Borno | 31% | 89 | ±10.4% |
| 34 | Sokoto | 33% | 76 | ±11.2% |
| 33 | Yobe | 34% | 67 | ±12.0% |
| 32 | Zamfara | 35% | 82 | ±10.8% |
Geographic divide: Southern states average 58% net confidence. Northern states average 38%. The 20-point gap is the largest we have recorded for any economic indicator.
Why the gap?
- Southern states have higher dollar remittance inflows (diaspora, oil services)
- Northern states face more severe inflation in food prices (Naira depreciation hits import-dependent regions harder)
- Lagos/Abuja have more formal sector workers with dollar-linked salaries or hedging options
3. Demographic Cross-Tabs
By Age Group
| Age | Net Confidence | Primary Concern |
|---|---|---|
| 18–24 | 68% | "Will the Naira affect my ability to study abroad?" |
| 25–34 | 55% | "Can I still afford rent in Lagos?" |
| 35–44 | 48% | "How do I protect my savings?" |
| 45–54 | 42% | "Will my pension be worth anything?" |
| 55+ | 38% | "Can I still afford medical imports?" |
Youth paradox: Young Nigerians (18–24) are the most confident — not because they understand monetary policy, but because they have fewer Naira-denominated assets to lose. Their confidence is optimism; older Nigerians' pessimism is experience.
By Income Bracket
| Income | Net Confidence | Hedging Behavior |
|---|---|---|
| < ₦50,000/month | 45% | 12% hold dollars |
| ₦50,000–150,000 | 48% | 23% hold dollars |
| ₦150,000–500,000 | 58% | 41% hold dollars |
| > ₦500,000 | 71% | 67% hold dollars |
Wealth insulation: Higher-income Nigerians are more confident because they are more protected. Two-thirds of the highest earners hold dollar savings, crypto, or foreign assets. For them, Naira volatility is an inconvenience, not an existential threat.
By Education
| Education | Net Confidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| No formal | 35% | Limited financial literacy, maximum exposure |
| Primary | 38% | Some awareness, no hedging capacity |
| Secondary | 48% | Moderate awareness, some hedging |
| Tertiary | 62% | High financial literacy, significant hedging |
4. The "Dollarization" Question
We asked a follow-up question: "Have you converted any of your savings to foreign currency in the past 6 months?"
| Response | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Yes, significantly (>50% of savings) | 18% |
| Yes, partially (10–50%) | 24% |
| No, but considering it | 31% |
| No, and not considering it | 27% |
Key finding: 42% of Nigerians have already dollarized at least partially. Another 31% are considering it. Only 27% remain fully committed to Naira savings.
This is a crisis of confidence in the currency itself — not just a complaint about inflation. When citizens abandon the national currency, the central bank's policy tools lose effectiveness.
5. What Nigerians Want: Policy Preferences
We asked respondents who selected "not confident" what policy would most improve their outlook:
| Policy | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Stable exchange rate (no sudden devaluations) | 42% |
| Lower inflation | 28% |
| Increased foreign reserves | 15% |
| Reduced government borrowing | 10% |
| Other / Don't know | 5% |
Policy implication: Nigerians prioritize predictability over any specific level. A stable Naira at ₦1,500/USD is preferred to a volatile Naira swinging between ₦1,200 and ₦1,800. The CBN's credibility problem is not the rate — it is the unpredictability.
6. Implications
For Policymakers (CBN, Ministry of Finance)
- Communicate predictably: The Naira's value matters less than the path to that value. Sudden policy shifts destroy confidence faster than gradual depreciation.
- Address the geographic divide: Northern Nigeria's 28% confidence in Kano is not just an economic problem — it is a political stability risk. Targeted intervention (agricultural credit, food price stabilization) is needed.
- Combat dollarization: 42% dollarization is approaching a tipping point. Incentives for Naira savings (indexed bonds, higher interest rates) must be credible and accessible to non-elites.
For Investors
- Consumer discretionary is risky: With 38% not confident and 42% dollarized, Naira-denominated consumer spending is vulnerable. Essentials (food, medicine, transport) are safer bets.
- Fintech opportunity: The 31% "considering dollarization" represents a massive market for accessible hedging products — dollar savings apps, inflation-indexed accounts, cross-border payment solutions.
- Geographic targeting: Southern states (72% confidence in Lagos) offer more stable demand than Northern states (28% in Kano). Factor this into market entry decisions.
For Citizens
- Financial literacy is survival: The 62% confidence among tertiary-educated Nigerians correlates with hedging behavior. Education — not income — is the best predictor of financial resilience.
- Diversify if you can: If you are in the ₦150,000+ bracket and not holding any foreign assets, you are in the minority. Consider accessible options (Eurobonds, dollar mutual funds, crypto with caution).
- Vote with your wallet: The 42% who want "stable exchange rate" should evaluate political candidates on monetary policy credibility, not just promises.
7. Methodology Note
This analysis is based on NigeriaPolls.ng's Naira Confidence Tracker, fielded February 10–14, 2026. Sample: 2,047 Nigerian adults (18+), stratified random sample across all 36 states + FCT. Multi-modal data collection: SMS (62%), WhatsApp (28%), IVR (10%). Weighted by state, gender, age, urban/rural, education. Margin of error: ±2.2% at 95% confidence. Quality control exclusion rate: 7.8%. Full dataset available for download.
About this post: Part of NigeriaPolls.ng's Quarterly Economic Analysis series. Data visualization: View interactive chart. Raw data: Download CSV.
Related: Consumer Confidence Index Q1 2026 | Cost of Living: Lagos vs. Abuja | Youth Employment Hope Index
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Cite this article (CC BY 4.0)
NigeriaPolls Research. (27 April 2026). "Naira Confidence Tracker Q1 2026: Full Analysis of Nigerian Currency Sentiment." NigeriaPolls. CC BY 4.0. https://nigeriapolls.com/blog/naira-confidence-tracker-q1-2026
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