The Complete Export Journey: What to Expect
After consulting for over 50 Nigerian exporters, I've seen that the biggest barrier isn't finding products or buyers—it's navigating the documentation and logistics maze. This guide breaks down the exact process, step by step, with realistic timelines and costs.
The export process has 4 distinct phases:
- Preparation (2-4 weeks): Business setup, registration, market research
- Documentation (1-2 weeks per shipment): Export licenses, certificates, banking
- Logistics (2-6 weeks): Quality inspection, shipping, customs clearance
- Payment Collection (1-2 weeks): Forex repatriation, incentive claims
Total timeline from registration to first payment: 6-12 weeks
Essential Export Requirements & Documentation
Core Business Registrations (One-Time Setup)
| Requirement | Authority | Cost | Processing Time | Validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAC Registration | Corporate Affairs Commission | ₦50,000-₦100,000 | 3-5 days | Perpetual |
| TIN Certificate | Federal Inland Revenue Service | Free | Immediate (online) | Perpetual |
| NEPC Registration | Export Promotion Council | ₦50,000-₦200,000 | 2-3 weeks | Annual renewal |
| Bank Dom Account | Commercial Bank | ₦100,000 min balance | 1-2 days | Ongoing |
💡 Pro Tip: NEPC Registration
NEPC registration is mandatory by law for all exporters. Attempting to export without it results in customs refusing clearance, ineligibility for Export Expansion Grant (EEG), and potential prosecution. Don't skip this step.
What you'll submit: CAC certificate, TIN, passport photos, business plan, bank statement
What you'll receive: NEPC certificate, exporter ID number, access to NEPC training programs and buyer database
Product-Specific Certifications
| Product Category | Required Certificate | Authority | Cost | Processing Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agricultural Products | Phytosanitary Certificate | Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Service | ₦50,000-₦100,000 | 3-5 days |
| Processed Foods | NAFDAC Registration | NAFDAC | ₦200,000-₦500,000 | 4-8 weeks |
| Industrial/Manufactured | SON Certificate | Standards Organization of Nigeria | ₦150,000-₦300,000 | 2-3 weeks |
| Minerals | Mining Permit/License | Ministry of Mines & Steel | Varies | 4-8 weeks |
Per-Shipment Documentation
Every export consignment requires these documents:
- Commercial Invoice: Detailed breakdown of goods, quantities, unit prices, total value
- Packing List: Contents of each package/container with weights and dimensions
- Bill of Lading (B/L) for sea freight or Airway Bill (AWB) for air freight
- Certificate of Origin: Issued by Nigerian Chamber of Commerce (₦20,000-₦50,000, same day)
- Export Declaration Form: Filed through Nigeria Single Window portal
- Insurance Certificate: Marine/air cargo insurance (minimum 110% of CIF value)
- Pre-shipment Inspection Report: From NEPC-approved inspection agents
- Form NXP: Non-Oil Export Proceeds form from Central Bank (via your bank)
⚠️ Critical: Form NXP
Form NXP is mandatory for forex repatriation tracking. You must file it through your bank BEFORE shipment. Without it:
- You cannot claim Export Expansion Grant (losing 20% rebate)
- CBN may penalize you for unrepatriated forex
- Banks may flag your account for non-compliance
Processing: 1-2 days | Cost: ₦10,000-₦30,000
The 4-Phase Export Process: Step-by-Step
Preparation Phase
⏱️ Duration: 2-4 weeks | 💰 Investment: ₦250,000-₦500,000
Week 1: Business Formation
- Register your company with CAC
- Choose business name (check availability on CAC website)
- Decide on structure: Limited Liability Company (recommended for export)
- Submit online application via CAC portal
- Cost: ₦50,000-₦100,000 | Timeline: 3-5 days
- Obtain TIN from FIRS
- Apply online at https://www.firs.gov.ng
- Free | Immediate issuance
- Open corporate bank account
- Choose bank with good forex operations (GTBank, Zenith, First Bank, Access)
- Open both naira and domiciliary (USD) accounts
- Minimum balance typically ₦100,000
Week 2: Export Registration
- Apply for NEPC registration
- Visit NEPC office or apply online
- Submit: CAC certificate, TIN, ID, passport photos, business plan
- Attend mandatory 1-day orientation program
- Cost: ₦50,000-₦200,000 (based on business size)
- Timeline: 2-3 weeks
- Register on Nigeria Single Window portal
- Free registration at https://trade.gov.ng
- This portal handles export declarations
Weeks 3-4: Product & Market Research
- Identify specific product and target market
- Review Part 1 of this guide for product ideas
- Research buyer requirements for your target country
- Source reliable suppliers
- Visit farms/production sites personally
- Verify quality and capacity
- Negotiate prices and payment terms
- Get product samples tested
- Use NEPC-approved labs (Lagos, Kano)
- Cost: ₦50,000-₦150,000 per batch
- Ensures quality meets international standards
- Connect with freight forwarder and clearing agent
- Verify CRFFN licensing for freight forwarders
- Get quotes from 2-3 agents
- Typical fees: ₦150,000-₦400,000 per shipment
- Find international buyers
- Use NEPC buyer database
- Explore Alibaba.com, TradeKey, EC21
- LinkedIn outreach to procurement managers
- Attend trade fairs or join NEPC trade missions
Documentation Phase
⏱️ Duration: 1-2 weeks per shipment | 💰 Cost: ₦200,000-₦400,000
Start this process 2-3 weeks before planned shipment date to avoid last-minute rushes.
Step 1: Obtain Product-Specific Certificates (If Required)
- Phytosanitary Certificate (agricultural products)
- Apply to Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Service
- Inspector visits your warehouse/farm
- Cost: ₦50,000-₦100,000 | Timeline: 3-5 days
- NAFDAC Registration (if you haven't already for processed foods)
- This takes 4-8 weeks, so apply early
- Cost: ₦200,000-₦500,000 depending on product category
Step 2: Prepare Commercial Documents
- Create Commercial Invoice
- Include: Your company details, buyer details, product description with HS codes, quantities, unit prices, total FOB value, payment terms
- Must be on company letterhead, signed and stamped
- Create Packing List
- List every carton/bag: contents, net weight, gross weight, dimensions
- Include total packages, total net weight, total gross weight
- Apply for Certificate of Origin
- Submit to Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce
- Provide: Commercial invoice, packing list, CAC certificate, NEPC certificate
- Cost: ₦20,000-₦50,000 | Timeline: Same day if documents are complete
Step 3: Quality Inspection
- Schedule NEPC-approved inspection
- Inspector examines goods at your warehouse/farm
- Checks: Quantity, quality, packaging, labeling
- Issues Pre-shipment Inspection Report
- Cost: ₦50,000-₦150,000 | Timeline: 1-2 days
Step 4: Banking Procedures
- File Form NXP with your bank
- Provide: Proforma invoice from buyer, commercial invoice, packing list
- Bank files electronically with CBN
- Cost: ₦10,000-₦30,000 | Timeline: 1-2 days
- CRITICAL: Must be done BEFORE shipment
Step 5: Shipping Arrangements
- Book cargo space with freight forwarder
- Sea freight: Book 2-3 weeks in advance
- Air freight: Book 3-5 days in advance
- Confirm: Port/airport of loading, destination, container type (FCL/LCL), sailing/flight date
- Arrange cargo insurance
- Minimum 110% of CIF value
- Standard rate: 0.5-1% of cargo value
- Your freight forwarder can arrange this
Logistics Phase
⏱️ Duration: 2-6 weeks | 💰 Cost: Varies by destination
Step 1: Container Loading & Sealing
- Move goods to container loading point
- Ensure proper packaging (export-grade bags/crates)
- Label every package clearly
- Palletize where possible (speeds up loading/unloading)
- Load container under supervision
- FCL (Full Container Load): Your goods fill entire container
- 20ft container: ~20-25 MT capacity
- 40ft container: ~25-28 MT capacity
- LCL (Less than Container Load): Share container (minimum 1 MT recommended)
- FCL (Full Container Load): Your goods fill entire container
- Container sealed by customs
- Customs officer inspects and seals container
- Seal number recorded on all documents
Step 2: Customs Export Clearance
- Submit export declaration
- File through Nigeria Single Window portal
- Upload all documents (invoice, packing list, certificates)
- Pay applicable fees
- Export processing fees: ₦50,000-₦150,000 (varies by cargo value)
- Port charges included in freight forwarder's quote
- Customs inspection and release
- Timeline: 1-3 days if documents are complete
- May require physical inspection (random or risk-based)
- Once cleared, customs issues release note
Step 3: Vessel Loading & Departure
- Container transported to port/airport
- Freight forwarder arranges haulage
- Container loaded onto vessel/aircraft
- Receive shipping documents
- Bill of Lading (B/L) for sea freight - your title document
- Airway Bill (AWB) for air freight
- Freight forwarder provides cargo tracking number
Step 4: Transit & Tracking
Typical Transit Times:
- To Netherlands/Europe: 18-25 days sea freight
- To USA: 25-35 days sea freight
- To Asia (China/India): 28-40 days sea freight
- Air freight: 3-7 days to most global destinations
Monitor shipment online using tracking number provided by freight forwarder.
Payment Collection Phase
⏱️ Duration: 1-2 weeks | 💰 Outcome: Get paid!
Step 1: Submit Shipping Documents to Buyer
- Send via courier (DHL/FedEx):
- Original Bill of Lading (negotiable copy)
- Commercial invoice (signed and stamped)
- Packing list
- Certificate of Origin
- Quality inspection certificate
- Phytosanitary/other required certificates
Step 2: Receive Payment
Payment methods ranked by safety:
SAFEST: Letter of Credit (LC)
- Bank guarantees payment if you meet all terms
- Cost: 1-3% of invoice value + bank charges
- Best for new buyers or large transactions (₦10M+)
- Timeline: 5-10 days after document submission
MODERATE RISK: Documentary Collection (D/P or D/A)
- Buyer gets documents only after payment (D/P) or acceptance (D/A)
- Cheaper than LC: ₦50,000-₦100,000 flat fee
- Timeline: 7-14 days
HIGHER RISK: Telegraphic Transfer (T/T)
- T/T in advance: Buyer pays before shipment (safest for exporter)
- T/T after B/L copy: Buyer pays when you send B/L copy (moderate risk)
- T/T on arrival: Buyer pays after goods arrive (highest risk—avoid unless trusted buyer)
HIGHEST RISK: Open Account
- Ship goods, buyer pays 30-90 days later
- Only for established, trusted buyers with 5+ successful transactions
- Consider trade credit insurance (₦300,000-₦500,000/year for ₦50-100M coverage)
Step 3: Forex Repatriation (MANDATORY)
- Ensure payment hits your domiciliary account within 90 days
- Bank automatically files electronic Form NXP with CBN
- If delayed beyond 90 days: Penalties + EEG ineligibility
- Convert forex to naira (if desired)
- You can keep dollars in domiciliary account or convert
- Banks offer forex conversion services
Step 4: Claim Export Expansion Grant (EEG)
- Apply within 1 year of export
- Submit: Form NXP, evidence of repatriation, shipping documents, inspection reports
- Grant amount: Up to 20% of FOB value (paid in naira)
- Processing: 6-12 months (government bureaucracy)
- Reality check: Government delays common—don't count on this money arriving quickly
Real-World Case Study: Mrs. Chioma's Electronics Export
📦 Complete Import Journey: From Registration to Profit
Exporter: Mrs. Chioma Okonkwo, electronics trader
Business: Computer Village, Ikeja, Lagos
Product: 500 units smartphones and tablets (mixed)
Origin: Purchased from Lagos suppliers
Destination: Ghana (land border via truck)
Shipping Mode: Road freight
Timeline & Process:
Week 1-4: Preparation
- CAC registration: ₦75,000 (completed in 4 days)
- NEPC registration: ₦120,000 (took 3 weeks)
- TIN: Free, obtained online same day
- Bank account: ₦100,000 minimum balance
- Total preparation cost: ₦295,000
Week 5-6: Finding Buyer & Documentation
- Connected with Accra-based electronics distributor through NEPC buyer database
- Negotiated terms: $18,000 FOB Lagos, payment via T/T 50% advance, 50% on delivery
- Form NXP filed: ₦25,000
- Certificate of Origin: ₦30,000
- Quality inspection: ₦80,000
- Insurance: ₦150,000
- Total documentation: ₦285,000
Week 7: Logistics
- Packaged goods professionally: ₦120,000
- Road freight to Accra (via Seme border): ₦450,000
- Customs clearance (Nigeria side): ₦95,000
- Total logistics: ₦665,000
Week 8: Delivery & Payment
- Goods arrived safely in Accra
- Received balance payment: $9,000 (₦13,140,000)
- Total received: $18,000 = ₦26,280,000
💰 Complete Financial Breakdown:
| Product Purchase Cost | ₦20,500,000 |
| Preparation Costs (one-time) | ₦295,000 |
| Documentation | ₦285,000 |
| Logistics & Shipping | ₦665,000 |
| Packaging | ₦120,000 |
| TOTAL INVESTMENT | ₦21,865,000 |
| Revenue (FOB) | ₦26,280,000 |
| NET PROFIT | ₦4,415,000 |
Results:
- ✅ ROI: 20.2% on first shipment
- ✅ Per-unit profit: ₦8,830 per device
- ✅ Timeline: 8 weeks from registration to payment
- ✅ No demurrage costs (land freight, no port delays)
- ✅ Lessons learned: AfCFTA tariff relief made Ghana market very profitable
Mrs. Chioma's Insight: "The NEPC registration felt bureaucratic, but it was worth it. The buyer database connected me with a reliable importer, and their training program taught me how to negotiate payment terms. I'm now doing quarterly shipments and averaging ₦4-5 million profit per trip."
Second Shipment Update: With preparation costs already covered, her second shipment (3 months later) netted ₦4.7 million profit with improved margins through better supplier negotiations.
Pre-Shipment Checklist: Don't Ship Without These
✅ Complete Export Checklist
CAC certificate, TIN, NEPC registration, domiciliary bank account opened
Purchase order received, payment terms agreed, delivery timeline confirmed
Phytosanitary (if agricultural), NAFDAC (if food), SON (if manufactured)
Commercial invoice, packing list, Certificate of Origin
CRITICAL: Must be done BEFORE shipment for forex repatriation tracking
NEPC-approved inspector issued pre-shipment inspection report
Freight forwarder confirmed container/flight booking
Minimum 110% of CIF value coverage obtained
Export-grade packaging, clear labeling, palletized where possible
Letter of Credit opened OR advance payment received OR Documentary Collection arranged
Budget prepared for port charges, agent fees, documentation costs
CRFFN-licensed agent briefed with all documents
Common Mistakes That Kill Export Deals
🚫 Mistake #1: Shipping Without a Confirmed Buyer
The trap: "I'll ship and find buyers when it arrives."
Reality: Your cargo sits accumulating storage fees while you desperately search. Buyers smell desperation and lowball offers.
Solution: ALWAYS have a signed purchase order or contract BEFORE you ship. No exceptions.
🚫 Mistake #2: Ignoring Documentation Requirements
The trap: "I'll figure it out" or assuming your agent will handle everything.
Reality: One missing document (e.g., Phytosanitary certificate for USA) can cause permanent rejection, ₦5-15M loss, company blacklisting.
Solution: Create a documentation checklist for each market. Triple-check before shipping.
🚫 Mistake #3: Poor Packaging Leading to Quality Loss
The trap: Using cheapest bags/boxes to save ₦50,000-₦100,000.
Reality: Moisture seeps in during sea freight, product arrives moldy/damaged, buyer rejects, you lose ₦10-20M.
Solution: Invest in proper packaging: moisture barrier bags, refrigerated containers for perishables, fumigation for pest-prone products.
🚫 Mistake #4: Forex Repatriation Failure
The trap: Buyer pays into wrong account or payment delayed beyond 90 days.
Reality: CBN penalizes you, EEG ineligibility (losing 20% rebate), bank flags your account.
Solution: File Form NXP before shipping, monitor payment arrival, include repatriation clause in buyer contract.
🚫 Mistake #5: Underestimating Total Costs
The trap: Calculating only FOB + Freight, forgetting dozens of smaller fees.
Hidden costs that add 20-40%:
- Quality testing: ₦50,000-₦150,000
- Packaging materials: ₦200,000-₦500,000 per container
- Warehouse storage: ₦50,000-₦150,000/month
- Port charges: ₦150,000-₦300,000
- Agent fees: ₦150,000-₦400,000
- Documentation: ₦100,000-₦200,000
- Bank charges: ₦50,000-₦100,000
Solution: Add 15-20% buffer for unexpected costs. Use comprehensive budgeting from case studies.
🎯 Ready to Master Advanced Strategies?
You now know the WHAT (products) and HOW (process). Next, learn the expert strategies to maximize profits, reduce costs, and avoid pitfalls that trap 80% of new exporters.
Continue to Part 3: Expert Tips & FAQ →