Traveling to Nigeria from the US — entry, advisories, US embassy
Current US State Department travel advisory for Nigeria, US embassy location in Nigeria, entry requirements, and US-Nigeria bilateral relations. For immigr
Traveling to Nigeria from the US
This page is for immigrants in the United States planning a trip to Nigeria — whether for a home-country visit, family event, business travel, or relocation. We summarize the current US State Department travel advisory, US embassy location in Nigeria, and key bilateral context that affects re-entry to the US.
US Embassy + diplomatic relations
Re-entry to the US after visiting Nigeria
US permanent residents (green-card holders):
- Trips under 6 months: normal re-entry process at port of entry
- Trips 6 months to 1 year: may face questioning about abandonment of LPR status
- Trips over 1 year: green card considered abandoned — apply for SB-1 returning resident visa at US embassy in Nigeria BEFORE returning
- Apply for Re-entry Permit (Form I-131) BEFORE departing if trip will be 1-2 years
TPS holders, asylum applicants, DACA recipients:
- MUST apply for Advance Parole (Form I-131) BEFORE leaving the US
- Returning without Advance Parole may abandon your application/status
- Some TPS holders may not be eligible for Advance Parole — consult attorney
US citizens:
- US passport required (valid 6+ months past entry date in most countries)
- Nigeria visa: check with Nigeria’s embassy in the US — many countries waive visa for US citizens or issue visa on arrival
Related procedural information
- Consulate of Nigeria in the US — handles your home-country documents (passport, ID, civil registry) WHILE in the US
- US Visa Reciprocity for Nigeria citizens — for Nigeria citizens applying for US visa
- USCIS Form I-131 — Travel Documents (Advance Parole) — required before leaving for TPS/asylum/DACA holders
- USCIS Form I-90 — Green card replacement — if green card is lost/stolen abroad
- USCIS Form N-400 — Naturalization — long absences can affect continuous-residence requirement
- Find an immigration attorney — for advance-parole risk assessment
Last verified: 2026-05-27. General procedural information — not legal or travel advice. Travel advisories change frequently; verify at travel.state.gov before planning. Nigeria entry requirements change too; verify with Nigeria’s embassy or consulate before traveling.
Re-entry deadlines, fees, and contacts (2025-2026)
USCIS Form I-131 (Application for Travel Document) covers Advance Parole for TPS holders, asylum applicants, and DACA recipients. Filing fee: approximately $660 for paper, biometric services fee $85 where applicable. Processing time: approximately 5-8 months for routine; emergency expedite available via USCIS Contact Center 1-800-375-5283 with documentation of urgent humanitarian need.
Re-entry Permit (Form I-131): approximately $660 + $85 biometrics for LPRs planning trips of 1-2 years. SB-1 Returning Resident Visa: approximately $180 application fee at US embassy abroad, required if LPR absent more than 1 year without I-131 Re-entry Permit. The 3-year and 10-year unlawful-presence bars under INA 212(a)(9)(B) apply to individuals who accrued 180+ days or 1+ year of unlawful presence before departing — consult an AILA-member immigration attorney BEFORE traveling if you have any prior unlawful presence.
The State Department’s Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) at step.state.gov is free; US citizens and LPRs can enroll for the country they’re visiting to receive emergency alerts and assist embassy contact if needed. US Embassy emergency line for US citizens abroad: 1-888-407-4747 (from US/Canada) or +1-202-501-4444 (from overseas, 24/7).
For passport services: routine US passport processing 8-11 weeks ($165 fee), expedited 3-5 weeks (+$60), emergency in-person life-or-death (~2 weeks). Children under 16 require both-parent consent (Form DS-3053 if one parent absent). The DS-160 (nonimmigrant visa) and DS-260 (immigrant visa) are separate State Department systems — not used for US passports.
For port-of-entry processes (wait times, I-94 retrieval), use bwt.cbp.gov or CBP’s CBP Link app — the former CBP One app was discontinued in January 2025. Global Entry interview by appointment ($120 since October 2024, 5-year membership). Verify all current fees at travel.state.gov before paying.
Frequently asked questions
Is it safe to travel to Nigeria right now?
What documents do I need to travel to Nigeria from the US?
Where is the US Embassy in Nigeria?
Can I get my US green card stamped at the US Embassy in Nigeria?
The rules change. Hear about it first.
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General information, not legal advice. MigrantUSA is an independent publisher and is not a law firm; using this site does not create an attorney-client relationship, and this content is not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney about your specific situation. US federal, state, and local government procedures, fees, and forms change. Always verify current details directly with the relevant agency before acting. For immigration, tax, or other legal matters specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney or BIA-accredited representative.
