The Federal Government has announced that 2026 budget exchange rate projection and also the oil price benchmarkIn the approved document, GDP growth is projected at 4.68%, with gross federation revenue estimated at N50.74 trillionNigerian government has projected N20.10 trillion budget deficit, with major spending allocated to debt service, statutory transfers, and non-debt recurrent expenditureLegit.ng journalist Dave Ibemere has over a decade of experience in business journalism, with in-depth knowledge of the Nigerian economy, stocks, and general market trends.
The federal government has approved a budget exchange rate of N1,512 to $1 for 2026 as part of its 2026ā2028 Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP).
In 2025, the federal government set the exchange rate at N1,400 to a dollar
FG sets 2026 budget exchange rate at N1,512/$1.
Photo: Presidency
Source: TwitterThe MTEF/FSP, a statutory three-year fiscal guide, sets assumptions that will underpin the 2026 Appropriation Bill, including oil/output benchmarks, revenue projections, deficit limits, and spending priorities.
FG new projects for 2026Abubakar Atiku Bagudu, the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, who disclosed the framework at a briefing in Abuja on Wednesday, December 3, also revealed a conservative oil price benchmark of $64.85 per barrel.
The minister said the framework developed with input from ministries, the private sector, civil society, and development partners and will be transmitted to the National Assembly by Monday, December 8.
He explained that the MTEF proposes two oil production targets: an ambitious 2.06 million barrels per day (mbpd) and a lower 1.80 mbpd figure for budgeting purposes.
The minister noted that pre-election spending could influence the exchange rate.
Bagudu said:
āFor the first time, a target oil production as well as benchmark oil production were adopted.āThe target oil production is 2.06 million barrels per day, which the management of the oil industry is tasked to produce. However, so that we donāt run into revenue problems, we use a benchmark oil production figure of 1.8 mbpd for budget purposes.āOn the price benchmark, Bagudu added:
āEven the oil benchmark of $64.85 is lower than the average selling price of Nigeriaās crude oil, because Nigeria is a premium Bonny Light producer. But for an abundance of caution, we are using $64.85.āāThe 2026 macro assumptions also include a GDP growth projection of 4.68%. āGiven that 2026 is a pre-election year, there is a lot of election activity spending that can typically affect the exchange rate.āNaira target leads 2026ā2028 Medium-Term Fiscal Plan.
Photo: Bloomberg
Source: Getty ImagesFG projectionsAccording to the minister gross federation revenue is estimated at N50.74 trillion, with the Federal Government expected to receive N22.60 trillion, states N16.30 trillion, and local governments N11.85 trillion, Vanguard reports.
Punch reports that total federal government revenue is projected at N34.33 trillion, including N4.98 trillion from government owned enterprises, a sixteen percent decline from the 2025 budget estimate.
He outlined the major spending heads include statutory transfers of around N3 trillion, debt service of N15.91 trillion, and non debt recurrent expenditure of about N15.27 trillion.
While the projected deficit is N20.10 trillion, roughly 3.61 percent of GDP, implying a total federal spending envelope of N54.43 trillion.
FX reserves hit $43bnEarlier, Legit.ng reported that Nigeriaās external reserves increased to $42.202 billion on Wednesday from $42.169 billion the previous day.
The rise was driven by steady inflows from crude oil sales, diaspora remittances, and renewed foreign portfolio investments.
The stronger reserves position enhances Nigeriaās capacity to stabilise its currency, meet external obligations, and reassure international investors of improved macroeconomic fundamentals.
Source: Legit.ng

