Victoria Island accounts for 10 of the 33 planned hotel chain projects in Lagos’ pipeline for 2026, ranking as the highest-performing submarket in the state.
This was disclosed to Nairametrics by Trevor Ward, principal of W Hospitality Group, following the release of the Hotel Chain Development Pipelines in Africa – 2026 report, which provided additional insights into Lagos State’s hotel development landscape beyond the published data.
Lagos State remains the dominant hub for hotel chain development in Nigeria, accounting for more than half of all planned hotel rooms nationwide.
Within this market, Victoria Island continues to stand out as the leading destination for new hotel investments, ahead of other key submarkets such as Lekki and Ikeja.
The Lagos State hotel chain development pipeline remains the most active in Nigeria, with 33 planned hotel projects and 4,721 rooms as of Q1 2026. The data is based on signed deal information compiled in early 2026 from 53 regional and international hotel chains.
Victoria Island leads Lagos submarkets with 10 planned hotel pipeline projects.
Lekki and Ikeja follow closely, each with 7 pipeline projects.
Ikoyi accounts for 5 planned pipeline projects, while the airport corridor has 3 and resort locations have 1.
Lagos accounts for 51.6 per cent of Nigeria’s total 9,147 planned hotel rooms.
In terms of project status, 64.8 per cent of Lagos pipeline rooms are still in the planning stage, while 35.2 per cent are under construction.
In contractual structure, Hotel Management Agreements dominate with 74.3 per cent, compared to 25.7 per cent under franchise models.
The Hotel Chain Development Pipelines in Africa – 2026 report is based on signed hotel development agreements between operators and developers, rather than announcements or informal project listings. It focuses only on deals that have reached a formal commitment stage.
The dataset reflects signed pipeline deals collected as of early 2026.
It includes only hotel chains operating across multiple African countries or international chains active in more than one global market.
Domestic hotel groups operating within a single country were excluded from the analysis.
A total of 53 regional and international hotel chains were covered, including some without active pipeline projects.
The methodology is designed to capture committed developments rather than proposed or unconfirmed hotel projects.
Across Nigeria, there are 61 hotels in the development pipeline across 11 hotel chains, totaling 9,147 rooms as of Q1 2026. Marriott International leads with 23 planned hotels, followed by Radisson Hotel Group with 9 and Hilton with 8.
Accor and Continent each account for 6 pipeline hotels.
Wyndham has 3, Ascott has 2, while Hyatt, IHG, Leva, and BWH Hotels each have 1.
Lagos hosts all 11 hotel chains with active pipelines in Nigeria.
In Abuja, four hotel chains are active in the pipeline: Accor, Hilton, Marriott International, and Radisson Hotel Group. In the city’s pipeline, 72.1 per cent of rooms are still in the planning stage (2,153 rooms), while 27.9 per cent are under construction (834 rooms), indicating that most projects have yet to reach the construction phase.
Across development and operating structures, Hotel Management Agreements dominate Abuja’s pipeline with 84.5 per cent of rooms (2,523 rooms), compared to 15.5 per cent under franchise models (464 rooms).
Elsewhere, Asaba records two hotel chains in the pipeline—Hilton and Marriott International—while Ibadan also has two, represented by Continent and Marriott International.
Other cities show more limited activity, typically driven by a single operator in the pipeline.
Aba is represented by Radisson Hotel Group, Benin City, also by Radisson Hotel Group, Bonny Island by Continent, Enugu by Hilton, and Kano similarly by Hilton.
Remo in Ogun State has Continent in the pipeline, while Yenagoa records Radisson Hotel Group as its sole pipeline project.
Africa remains one of the most active hospitality investment frontiers globally, supported by rising tourism demand, expanding urban economies, and a steadily growing pipeline of branded hotel developments.
At the start of 2026, the continent’s hotel chain development pipeline stood at 675 hotels and 123,846 rooms, marking an 18.6 per cent year-on-year increase, according to the Hotel Chain Development Pipelines in Africa – 2026 report by W Hospitality Group.
Lagos ranks third among Africa’s cities and resort destinations for planned hotel rooms in 2026. The city operates as a multi-centre market, with demand driven by business, leisure, and transit activity across its key districts.
Following a relatively subdued period of new openings, several branded hotels are expected to come on stream in 2026. About 60 per cent of Lagos’ pipeline is scheduled for delivery in 2026 and 2027.
Only Cairo and Sharm El Sheikh rank higher than Lagos among Africa’s cities and resort destinations, while no other Nigerian city features in the continent’s top 10.
