Every year, Nigerian travellers spend hundreds of thousands of naira more than they should on international flights. Not because cheap flights don’t exist, but because of avoidable, often repeated booking mistakes that quietly drain their travel budgets.

Think about this: two people fly from Lagos to London on the same day, in the same cabin class, on the same airline. One paid ₦480,000. The other paid ₦310,000. The difference? One knew how to book. The other didn’t.

Booking international flights from Nigeria is genuinely tricky. Airline pricing is dynamic and changes by the hour. Routes are limited. Visa requirements add an extra layer of complexity. And the pressure of travel deadlines, school resumption, medical appointments, business trips — often pushes travellers into rushed decisions that cost dearly.

This guide is here to change that. Below are the 10 most common flight booking mistakes Nigerians make, with practical, expert-backed solutions for each one. Whether you’re flying from Lagos or Abuja to the UK, Canada, or the USA, these lessons will save you money, stress, and wasted time.

 Mistake #1:  Waiting Too Long to Book Flights

This is the single most expensive mistake Nigerian travellers make. Many people wait until they have a confirmed visa, confirmed leave approval, and a finalized itinerary before touching a booking platform. By the time everything lines up, the affordable fares are gone.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  Nigerians often wait on multiple approvals simultaneously – visas, workplace leave, school term dates- before committing to a purchase.

CONSEQUENCE:  On high-demand routes like Lagos to London or Lagos to Toronto, fares can increase by ₦150,000 to ₦300,000 or more within just a few weeks. December flights booked in November can cost double what they would have in September.

THE FIX:  For standard travel, book 8 to 12 weeks in advance. For peak season – Christmas, Easter, summer — book 4 to 6 months ahead. The moment your travel plans are confirmed, treat the ticket purchase as urgent.

Mistake #2:  Booking During Peak Travel Seasons Without Planning Ahead

December is the most expensive month to fly internationally from Nigeria, full stop. Same for July and August. Yet thousands of Nigerians attempt to book these flights at the last minute every single year, then express shock at the prices they find.

Real example: A round-trip economy ticket from Lagos to London in early December can cost ₦700,000 to over ₦1,000,000 when booked in November. The same ticket bought in August for a December departure can cost as little as ₦450,000.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  Many Nigerians plan travel around school or work calendars and only book once the dates are confirmed – often just weeks before departure during the most expensive windows.

CONSEQUENCE:  Paying peak-season premiums that can represent 50% to 100% more than the off-peak fare for an identical seat.

THE FIX:  Mark your calendar. If you know you travel every December, start planning and booking by August or September at the latest. The flight will fill up regardless – the only question is whether you got a good price.

Mistake #3:  Not Comparing Multiple Airlines and Booking Platforms

Many Nigerian travellers book the first flight they find, or automatically reach for the same airline every time. Loyalty is admirable, but price-blindness is expensive. Different platforms show different fares for the same route on the same day, and the gap can be significant.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  Lack of familiarity with comparison tools, and the assumption that all platforms show identical prices.

CONSEQUENCE:  Paying ₦30,000 to ₦80,000 more per ticket than necessary on a single booking – multiplied across a family of four, that’s a serious sum.

THE FIX:  Always compare across at least four platforms – Tbils.com, Google Flights, Skyscanner, and Kayak are a solid starting point. Also consider connecting hubs: flights via Addis Ababa (Ethiopian Airlines) or Doha (Qatar Airways) often undercut direct routes on price.

Mistake #4:  Ignoring Midweek Flight Deals

If you always fly on Fridays, Saturdays, or Sundays, you are almost certainly paying more than you need to. Weekends are peak travel days for leisure travellers, which drives prices up. Midweek flights, particularly Tuesdays and Wednesdays – are consistently cheaper on international routes from Nigeria.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  Work and school schedules naturally push people toward weekend travel. Most Nigerians book for convenience, not price.

CONSEQUENCE:  Weekend departures on routes like Lagos to London or Lagos to New York can be ₦20,000 to ₦60,000 more expensive per ticket compared to equivalent midweek flights.

THE FIX:  If your schedule allows any flexibility, shift your departure to Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday. Even adjusting your return leg to a midweek day can generate meaningful savings. Also: book on Tuesdays – airlines often release fare sales Monday night.

Mistake #5:  Booking Flights Before Securing a Visa

This is a particularly Nigerian travel challenge. Some travellers book non-refundable or non-changeable tickets before their UK, US, or Canadian visa is approved, assuming the visa will come through in time. When it doesn’t, they either lose their ticket money entirely or pay hefty change fees.

Important note: Many visa applications require proof of onward travel — but this does not mean you must buy a fully-paid non-refundable ticket. Some airlines and agencies offer “visa support” documents or refundable bookings for this purpose. Ask your travel consultant about this option.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  Urgency, poor understanding of visa timelines, and confusion about what ‘proof of travel’ means for a visa application.

CONSEQUENCE:  Losing the full ticket cost on denied or delayed visas, or paying change fees on flexible tickets — both painful and avoidable.

THE FIX:  Use refundable or flexible-fare tickets when booking ahead of visa approval, or ask your travel agent for a visa support booking. Never purchase non-refundable tickets before your visa is in hand.

Mistake #6:  Falling for Fake Flight Deals and Travel Scams

As more Nigerians search for cheap international flights from Nigeria, fraudsters have followed. Fake travel agencies, counterfeit airline websites, and social media scams promising impossibly low fares cost unsuspecting travellers millions of naira every year.

If someone is offering a Lagos-to-London ticket for ₦80,000 via WhatsApp, that is not a deal, it is a scam. No legitimate booking at that price exists on that route.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  The desperate search for affordable fares creates vulnerability to too-good-to-be-true offers. Social media has made these scams far easier to distribute.

CONSEQUENCE:  Total financial loss – fraudulent tickets that don’t exist, non-functional booking references, and no recourse for recovery.

THE FIX:  Book only through verified, established travel agencies or official airline websites. Confirm ticket validity directly on the airline’s website using your booking reference. If a deal seems impossibly cheap, trust your instincts – it almost certainly is.

Mistake #7:  Not Checking Baggage Policies and Hidden Fees

Nigerian travellers are known for travelling with generous luggage, family gifts, foodstuffs, electronics, and everything in between. But many book the cheapest available fare without checking what baggage allowance comes with it, then face shock charges at the airport.

Real scenario: A family of four books cheap economy tickets to London at ₦380,000 each. At the airport, each excess baggage charge adds ₦45,000 per bag. Four extra bags later, the “cheap” ticket has become anything but.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  Headline ticket prices are compared without reading the fare conditions, which are often buried in small print.

CONSEQUENCE:  Unexpected airport charges for excess baggage, seat selection, meals, and flight changes that significantly inflate the total journey cost.

THE FIX:  Before booking, check: how many bags are included, the weight limit per bag, meal inclusion, and change/cancellation policies. A slightly more expensive fare with generous baggage allowance can be far cheaper than a budget fare with restrictive policies.

Mistake #8:  Using Inflexible Travel Dates

Locking in rigid travel dates, especially non-refundable ones, months before departure is a risk many Nigerian travellers take without fully understanding the consequences. Life in Nigeria is unpredictable: visa delays, work disruptions, medical emergencies, and family obligations all change plans unexpectedly.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  The cheapest fares are almost always the least flexible. Travellers naturally gravitate toward the lowest price without considering what happens if plans change.

CONSEQUENCE:  Losing the full ticket value, or paying change fees that sometimes cost more than the original fare difference. Missed flights due to inflexible routing in the event of delays.

THE FIX:  Use flexible date search tools on Tbils.com or Google Flights to identify the cheapest day in a given week or month. When life is unpredictable, invest in flexible or changeable fares — the extra cost is often worth the peace of mind.

Mistake #9:  Not Setting Price Alerts or Tracking Fares

Most Nigerian travellers don’t know that flight prices can be tracked and monitored automatically, for free. Instead of checking prices once and buying immediately (often at a non-optimal time), smart travellers set alerts and buy when prices dip to their target.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  Low awareness of price tracking tools available on major platforms. Many travellers search, see a price, and either buy it or abandon the search entirely.

CONSEQUENCE:  Buying at a price that might be ₦40,000 to ₦100,000 higher than what the same ticket would have cost a week earlier or later.

THE FIX:  Set price alerts on Google Flights, Skyscanner, or Kayak for your specific route and date range. These tools notify you by email or app when the price drops. Monitor fares for 2 to 4 weeks before committing to a purchase, especially for travel that’s more than 3 months away.

Mistake #10:  Booking the Wrong Airport or Route

Nigeria has major international airports in Lagos (LOS) and Abuja (ABV), and travellers should always compare prices from both. Additionally, many Nigerians booking long-haul flights default to the most obvious destination airport without considering alternatives that could save them money.

For example: flying into Manchester (MAN) instead of London Heathrow (LHR), or into Newark (EWR) instead of JFK in New York, can sometimes be meaningfully cheaper, and the ground connection is often straightforward.

WHY IT HAPPENS:  Travellers default to the most familiar airports without exploring alternatives that may offer better fares.

CONSEQUENCE:  Paying a premium simply because of airport choice, when an equally convenient alternative was available for less.

THE FIX:  Always search your route from both Lagos and Abuja. At your destination, use the “nearby airports” feature on Google Flights or Skyscanner to compare alternative entry points. The savings can be significant, especially on transatlantic routes.

Pro Tips to Book Cheap International Flights from Nigeria

These expert tips summarise the best practices for smart booking – simple, actionable, and proven:

  • Book 8–12 weeks ahead for standard travel; 4–6 months ahead for Christmas, Easter, and school admission season.
  • Use Google Flights’ flexible date calendar to see the cheapest day to fly in any given month. Sometimes shifting by 1–2 days saves ₦50,000 or more.
  • Search from both Lagos and Abuja and check nearby destination airports – Manchester vs London, Newark vs JFK, Buffalo vs Toronto.
  • Set price alerts on Tbils.com and Google Flights for your route. Let the algorithm work for you.
  • Book round-trip tickets where possible – they’re almost always cheaper than two separate one-way tickets on long-haul international routes.
  • Fly midweek — Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays consistently offer lower fares than weekend departures.
  • Work with a verified travel agency for complex itineraries, group bookings, or last-minute needs — they often access wholesale fares unavailable on public platforms.

Stop Losing Money on Avoidable Mistakes

Booking international flights from Nigeria doesn’t have to be a stressful or expensive experience. The difference between overpaying and getting great value almost always comes down to three things: timing, information, and the right tools.

The ten mistakes covered in this guide – from waiting too long to book, to ignoring midweek deals, to falling for scams – are all avoidable. And every single one of them costs real money when made.

The Nigerian traveller who books smart isn’t lucky – they’re informed. They plan ahead, compare options, understand what they’re buying, and know when to seek expert help.

If you’re planning international travel and want to be sure you’re getting the best available fare with the right policies – without spending hours hunting across booking platforms – our team at Tbils Travels is here to help.

Ready to Book Smarter?

At Tbils Travels, we specialise in finding affordable, reliable international flights for Nigerian travellers flying to the UK, Canada, USA, and destinations worldwide. Our consultants handle the research, the booking, and the details — so you can focus on your journey.

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