Nigeria’s economy grew at a steady clip in the third quarter of 2025, with real GDP rising by 3.98 percent year-on-year, slightly above the 3.86 percent recorded in the same period of 2024.
Fresh figures released by the National Bureau of Statistics show that Q3 delivered broad-based improvements across segments of the economy, even as some sectors continued to feel the weight of structural challenges, weak investment flows, and persistent supply-side pressures.
In its Q3 GDP report, the bureau noted that agriculture expanded by 3.79 percent, marking a notable improvement from 2.55 percent in Q3 2024. The rebound came primarily from stronger crop production, which remains the backbone of the agricultural economy and accounted for 65.99 percent of the sector’s nominal output. The uptick offers some relief after earlier fears that climate disruptions and input shortages could drag the sector deeper into slow-growth territory.
Industry grew by 3.77 percent, climbing from 2.78 percent a year earlier. The performance was shaped largely by the oil sector’s modest improvement and selective gains in manufacturing and construction. The services sector grew by 4.15 percent, lower than the 4.97 percent recorded in Q3 2024 but still strong enough to keep its position as the economy’s largest contributor. Services accounted for 53.02 percent of total output, a touch higher than the 52.93 percent recorded a year earlier, underscoring the economy’s continued tilt away from commodity dependence.
Nigeria’s aggregate nominal GDP rose sharply to N113.59 trillion in Q3 2025, up from N96.16 trillion in Q3 2024. The year-on-year increase of 18.12 percent reflects a mix of higher prices, sectoral expansion, and the continuing impact of currency depreciation on nominal values.
The oil sector delivered a mixed performance. Average daily crude oil production rose to 1.64 million barrels per day in Q3, higher than the 1.47 mbpd recorded in the same quarter of 2024, though slightly below the 1.68 mbpd achieved in Q2 2025. Real growth in the sector stood at 5.84 percent, just above the 5.66 percent recorded a year earlier.
The figure represents a sharp slowdown from the 20.46 percent surge reported in Q2, pulling back by 14.62 percentage points quarter-on-quarter. The sector contracted by 5.53 percent compared to Q2, reflecting the volatility that continues to characterise oil output despite ongoing repairs to pipelines and renewed security measures in producing areas.
Oil contributed 3.44 percent to real GDP in Q3 2025. This was slightly above the 3.38 percent recorded in Q3 2024 but lower than the 4.05 percent recorded in the second quarter of the year. The share remains well below historical levels, showing how the broader economy has been forced to expand outside oil since disruptions intensified over the past decade.
The non-oil sector grew by 3.91 percent in real terms, outperforming the 3.79 percent recorded in Q3 2024 and the 3.64 percent posted in Q2 2025. Growth was powered by agriculture, telecommunications, real estate, financial institutions, trade, construction, and pockets of resilience in manufacturing.
The non-oil economy accounted for 96.56 percent of total output. This was slightly below the 96.62 percent recorded a year earlier, but higher than the 95.95 percent in Q2 2025, showing that non-oil activity still dominates the economy even as fluctuations in the oil sector shape broader sentiment.
A deeper dive into sectoral movements shows that Mining and Quarrying, which includes crude oil, coal, metal ores, and other minerals, recorded a steep nominal decline of 41.08 percent year-on-year. The slump reflects weaker global commodity prices, production disruptions, and limited new investments that have left mining activity subdued.
Agriculture’s nominal growth of 3.18 percent in Q3 represented a slowdown of 14.87 percentage points compared to the same period in 2024, although the sector performed better than in the previous quarter, improving by 1.34 percentage points. Crop production remained dominant, reinforcing the ongoing need for mechanization and improved supply chains to unlock productivity gains in livestock, forestry, and fisheries.
Manufacturing, one of the sectors most affected by high energy costs and foreign exchange constraints, grew by 1.25 percent year-on-year. The figure was higher than the growth rate recorded in Q3 2024, but it slipped by 0.34 percentage points compared with Q2 2025. The modest improvement suggests that factory output continues to struggle with elevated operating costs, imported input shortages, and tepid consumer demand.
For context, Nigeria recorded a stronger GDP performance earlier in the year. In the second quarter, real GDP grew by 4.23 percent year-on-year, outpacing the 3.48 percent posted in Q2 2024. Aggregate nominal GDP in that quarter stood at N100.73 trillion, markedly higher than the N84.48 trillion recorded in Q2 2024, representing nominal growth of 19.23 percent.
The Q3 figures show the economy is still expanding, but at a slower and more uneven pace than policymakers would prefer. Agriculture is improving but remains vulnerable to disruptions. Industry is stabilizing, but is weighed down by the erratic oil sector. Services continue to prop up growth, though some segments are facing declining momentum.
The overall picture is one of a fragile recovery that still needs stronger investment inflows, a more predictable business environment, and steadier crude oil production to sustain momentum into 2026.








