Nigeria pension payments leave some retirees on less than N20,000 a month, the Nigeria Labour Congress says, renewing pressure for urgent reform. The union has long argued that such sums fall far short of what is needed to live with dignity.

The NLC is pushing for an acceptable national minimum pension and for payments to be automatically adjusted in line with inflation, so that retirees are not left behind as prices rise.
How low Nigeria pension payments can fall
Reports cited by the union describe some retirees receiving as little as a few thousand naira each month, well below the N20,000 mark. The congress calls these amounts grossly inadequate, especially against the backdrop of high living costs.
For pensioners trying to cover food, transport, rent and medicine, payments of that size offer little security. The union argues that decades of service should not end in hardship for those who built the country’s workforce.
Calls for a minimum pension
During the 2026 Workers’ Day commemorations, the NLC pressed for the implementation of an upward review that would set a minimum pension of around N20,000 for state retirees. The demand ties pension levels to the wider conversation about the national minimum wage.
NLC President Joe Ajaero has also demanded immediate payment of outstanding pensions and gratuities, and an end to what he describes as dehumanising verification processes that force elderly retirees to queue for hours to prove they are still alive.
Some states are moving
A few states have responded. Ekiti now pays its least-paid pensioner N20,000 following a minimum-wage consequential adjustment, while Kano raised its minimum pension from N5,000 to N20,000. The moves show change is possible where the political will exists.
The broader debate also touches the Contributory Pension Scheme. The NLC has called for the scheme to be reviewed, pointing to problems with non-remittance, weak enforcement and poor coordination between different pension arrangements.
The human cost
Behind the figures are retirees who gave decades to public service and now struggle to afford basics. Many describe choosing between food and medicine, or relying on relatives to survive, after a working life they expected would secure their old age.
Pensioners’ associations have repeatedly protested delays and meagre payments, warning that some retirees die while still waiting for entitlements. The emotional toll, advocates say, compounds the financial hardship.
The NLC argues that fixing pensions is not charity but a basic obligation. Indexing payments to inflation and guaranteeing a living minimum, the union says, would restore dignity to those who built the country’s institutions.
Why it matters
Pension adequacy affects millions of current and future retirees, and it shapes how Nigerians view the reward for a lifetime of work. When payments lag far behind inflation, the value of a pension erodes quickly.
The issue is now firmly on the national agenda, intertwined with the new minimum wage and rising costs. Whether the push translates into a guaranteed minimum pension and timely payments will determine if Nigeria’s retirees can look forward to a more secure old age. Specific figures should be confirmed against official NLC statements as the campaign develops.