Across Nigeria’s major urban centres, two-bedroom apartments have quietly become the most preferred residential option, reshaping how housing is built, rented, and sold. From Lagos and Abuja to Port Harcourt, these units now dominate property listings, reflecting a convergence of economic pressure, lifestyle realities, and investment logic.
Interviews with property developers, landlords, market analysts, and tenants show that two-bedroom apartments offer what larger or smaller units often fail to deliver: reasonable affordability, functional space, and reliable returns. This combination has pushed them to the centre of Nigeria’s residential property market.
For real estate developers, unit selection is driven by viability. Rising construction costs, fuelled by inflation, foreign exchange volatility, and high material prices, have made large apartments increasingly difficult to justify.
As gathered, developers increasingly structure projects around two-bedroom configurations, responding to clear economic incentives.
Lead Partner at Blumeen Partners in Port Harcourt, Temple Ugwu, notes that two-bedroom flats account for 55–58 per cent of his portfolio, while, if only flats are considered, they make up about 90 per cent.
Ugwu explains that the cost-to-income dynamics favour two-bedroom units: higher construction costs for larger units are not proportionally offset by rental income. For instance, a one-bedroom flat in Port Harcourt rents for about N1.5 million annually, a two-bedroom flat for N2.5 million, and a three-bedroom flat for around N3 million.
A real estate consultant based in Abule-Egba in Lagos, Angus Uche, said, “Once you move beyond two bedrooms, construction costs rise sharply, but rental income or sale prices do not increase at the same rate,” he said.
In Port Harcourt, he noted, a one-bedroom apartment typically rents for about N1.4 million annually, a two-bedroom for roughly N2.4 million, while a three-bedroom struggles to exceed N3 million.
“The marginal increase does not compensate for the additional cost of building larger units,” Uche added.
The calculation is even more compelling in Lagos, where land is scarce and expensive.
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