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Blog HomeArticlesGuidesCategoriesMarket WatchNeighbourhoodsBuying & LegalFor Owners
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  3. Renting in Ajah, Lagos: What to Budget and What to Expect

Renting in Ajah, Lagos: What to Budget and What to Expect

Posted on May 2, 2026
By Cabans Editorial
11 mins read

Ajah offers some of the most compelling rental value on the Lagos Island axis — renters get proximity to Lekki Phase 1, Chevron, and Victoria Island at 30–50% below equivalent Phase 1 rental rates. But renting in Ajah requires more due diligence than renting in more established markets. Estates vary significantly in management quality, generator cost structures are not always disclosed upfront, and Lagos landlord practices mean renters who skip verification steps regularly face expensive surprises after signing. This guide gives you current price benchmarks, the estate-by-estate rental breakdown, and the verification checklist that protects you before any money changes hands.

Current rental price ranges in Ajah

Rental rates across the Ajah corridor have increased by approximately 20–30% over the past two years, tracking Lagos-wide rental inflation driven by currency depreciation and constrained housing supply. Here are current benchmarks by property type:

  • 1-bedroom flat: ₦800,000–₦1.6m per annum
  • 2-bedroom flat: ₦1.3m–₦2.8m per annum
  • 3-bedroom flat or semi-detached: ₦2.5m–₦5.5m per annum
  • 4-bedroom semi-detached or detached (gated estate): ₦4.5m–₦8m per annum
  • 5-bedroom detached (premium estate): ₦7m–₦12m per annum

These are asking price ranges. Actual agreed rents vary by estate, property condition, landlord profile, and how long the unit has been available. Properties that have been on the market for 3 months or more often have negotiating room; newly listed well-located units in premium estates do not.

Estate-by-estate rental guide

Thomas Estate is the premium end of the Ajah rental market. 3-bedroom semi-detached: ₦3.5m–₦5.5m per annum. Consistent security, tarmac internal roads, and an active residents' association make this the preferred estate for corporate tenants and families who prioritise management quality. Landlords in Thomas Estate are generally more professional and more open to quarterly or biannual payment structures than landlords in older Ajah estates.

Orchid Estate, positioned off Chevron Drive, commands a premium within Ajah due to its Phase-1-adjacent location. 2-bedroom flats: ₦2.2m–₦3.2m; 3-bedroom semi-detached: ₦4m–₦6m. Demand is high from professionals in the Chevron–Lekki corridor. Units lease quickly — start your search 3–4 months before your intended move-in date if targeting this estate.

Crown Estate is the mid-range workhorse of the Ajah rental market. 2-bedroom flats: ₦1.3m–₦2.2m; 3-bedroom semi-detached: ₦2.5m–₦4m. Good access to Novare Lekki Mall and the expressway. The estate is large and quality is uneven between sections — view multiple options within Crown Estate before committing to any specific unit.

Abraham Adesanya Estate is the largest and most accessible entry-level address. 1-bedroom flats: ₦800k–₦1.3m; 2-bedroom flats: ₦1.3m–₦2m. Strong demand from young professionals and single-income families. Estate management quality varies significantly by section — newer sections toward the estate interior are generally better maintained than older sections near the main gates.

Sangotedo Estate offers newer builds with better road quality than many Ajah-area estates. 2-bedroom flats: ₦1.2m–₦2m; 3-bedroom semi-detached: ₦2.5m–₦4m. Slightly longer commute to Chevron and Phase 1, but good value for tenants working locally or toward the Ibeju-Lekki corridor.

Payment terms: what Lagos tenancy law says vs. what landlords ask

Most Ajah landlords still request 1–2 years' advance rent at lease signing. The Lagos State Tenancy Law (2011) prohibits landlords from demanding more than 12 months' rent in advance from a prospective tenant, and prohibits requesting more than 6 months' rent in advance from an existing tenant on renewal. However, enforcement remains inconsistent and many landlords continue to request 2 years advance, particularly in estates with high demand. Knowing your legal rights gives you negotiating leverage, even if not all landlords concede.

Newer, professionally managed estate developments are more likely to offer quarterly or biannual payment structures. Ask explicitly about payment flexibility before viewing — not after — if advance payment structure is a constraint for you.

Generator and power costs: the hidden monthly expense

Power supply in Ajah is predominantly generator-dependent with intermittent PHCN supply. How generator costs are structured varies significantly by estate and individual landlord — and this is one of the most commonly undisclosed costs at the viewing stage:

  • All-inclusive service charge: Some estates bundle diesel into the monthly service charge (₦25,000–₦60,000 per month all-in for a 2–3 bedroom unit). This is the most predictable arrangement for tenants.
  • Separate diesel billing: Many estates meter individual units and bill diesel separately — typically ₦15,000–₦45,000 per month depending on usage. This cost is often not disclosed until after lease signing.
  • Private generator: Some older properties or standalone houses have individual generators. Budget ₦30,000–₦80,000 per month in diesel depending on generator capacity and usage patterns.

Always ask directly: "Is diesel included in the service charge or billed separately, and what was the average monthly diesel bill for this unit last year?" before signing. The answer materially affects your total monthly occupancy cost.

What to verify before signing any Ajah tenancy agreement

  • Landlord's right to let: Confirm the person you are paying is the legitimate owner or a properly authorised agent. Ask to see the property title document and cross-reference the name against the person or company receiving payment. Never pay an agent without confirming the landlord's identity and their authority to let.
  • Title documentation: Confirm the property has a Certificate of Occupancy or valid Deed of Assignment. This protects you as a tenant if title disputes arise after you have moved in.
  • Estate management body: Confirm the residents' association is active and request the current service charge schedule in writing. Verbal assurances about service charges are not enforceable.
  • Water supply source: Confirm whether the property is served by borehole, Lagos Water Corporation supply, or tanker delivery — and the reliability of each. Tanker-dependent properties add ₦10,000–₦25,000 per month in supplementary water costs that are not included in most rental quotes.
  • Road and drainage condition: Visit during or immediately after the rainy season (June–September) or ask current tenants about flooding. Some sections of Ajah estates experience surface flooding that is not disclosed at the viewing stage.
  • Internet infrastructure: If reliable broadband is essential, confirm which providers have fibre or fixed-wireless coverage in that specific estate. Coverage varies at the estate level, not just by neighbourhood.

Agent fees in Ajah

Agency fees are typically 10% of annual rent charged to the tenant, plus a legal/tenancy agreement fee of ₦50,000–₦150,000 for the solicitor drafting the tenancy agreement. Some agents attempt to charge both the landlord and tenant — confirm in writing who pays what before any viewing. An agent requesting fees before a tenancy agreement has been signed, or before you have viewed the property, is a significant red flag.

Best times to search for rentals in Ajah

The most competitive periods for available units are February–April (quieter post-holiday market with landlords motivated to fill vacancies) and May–June (before the school-year demand peak). August–October is the most competitive season — families relocating before the new school year compete hard for well-located units and available supply tightens quickly. If you are targeting a specific estate, start your search 3–4 months before your intended move-in date during peak seasons to have the best selection and negotiating position.

Bottom line

Ajah delivers genuine rental value for tenants who do their homework on estate selection, generator cost transparency, and landlord verification. The key mistakes to avoid: comparing rents without accounting for diesel costs, skipping verification of the landlord's right to let, and signing a lease before visiting the estate during rainy season. Browse verified rental listings in Ajah or explore the full Ajah property overview to see what is currently available across all estates and price bands.

Take the next step

Keep your research practical: search for property in Ajah, compare live options for flat for rent in Ajah, or list your property on Cabans to reach active buyers and renters.

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