If you or a loved one has just been diagnosed with diabetes, one of your first questions is probably: how much will this cost me every month? It's a fair question — and in Nigeria, with rising drug prices and a healthcare system where most costs are out-of-pocket, it's a critical one.
The short answer: a Type 2 diabetic on oral medication in Nigeria spends roughly ₦8,000 to ₦25,000 per month. An insulin-dependent diabetic spends ₦20,000 to ₦60,000 monthly. But the full picture is more nuanced, and the difference between "controlled and affordable" versus "uncontrolled and ruinously expensive" comes down to daily habits, not dramatic interventions. This guide breaks down every cost category so you can plan realistically and cut expenses where possible.
The 5 Cost Categories Every Nigerian Diabetic Pays
Diabetes cost in Nigeria breaks down into five buckets. Understanding each helps you budget accurately and spot where you can save.
1. Medication
This is usually the largest recurring cost. For Type 2 diabetes, the first-line drug is almost always metformin. For insulin-dependent diabetics (Type 1 or advanced Type 2), insulin is the main expense.
| Medication | Typical dose | Monthly cost (₦) |
|---|---|---|
| Metformin 500mg (generic) | 1,000mg twice daily | ₦2,500 – ₦5,000 |
| Glucophage (branded metformin) | 1,000mg twice daily | ₦6,000 – ₦10,000 |
| Glibenclamide 5mg | 5–10mg daily | ₦1,500 – ₦3,500 |
| Gliclazide 80mg | 80mg twice daily | ₦4,000 – ₦8,000 |
| Insulin (Mixtard / Actrapid) | 40–60 units/day | ₦15,000 – ₦30,000 |
| Insulin (analog, e.g. Lantus, NovoRapid) | 30–50 units/day | ₦30,000 – ₦55,000 |
Prices vary by city, pharmacy, and whether the drug is imported. Pharmacies in Lagos and Abuja are generally more expensive than those in Kano, Ibadan, or Enugu. Branded imported drugs cost two to three times the price of locally-produced generics — and for most patients, the generics are clinically equivalent.
2. Blood Sugar Monitoring (Glucometer + Strips)
You only need to buy a glucometer once (₦8,000 to ₦30,000 depending on brand — Accu-Chek, Contour, and OneTouch are common in Nigeria). The ongoing cost is test strips, which are where monitoring quietly becomes expensive.
A single strip costs between ₦250 and ₦600 in 2026. If you test twice daily, that's ₦15,000 to ₦36,000 per month on strips alone. For newly-diagnosed patients adjusting medication, daily testing is essential. For stable patients, most doctors recommend testing three to four times a week, bringing strip costs down to ₦3,000 to ₦8,000 monthly.
⚠️ Tip: Strips are brand-locked to glucometer models. Before buying a meter, check the strip price — a cheap meter paired with expensive strips costs more over a year than a premium meter with affordable strips. Cumulative strip cost often exceeds meter cost within six months.
3. Laboratory Tests
Two tests matter most for diabetes management in Nigeria:
- HbA1c (every 3–6 months): ₦5,000 – ₦12,000 per test. This is the most important test for long-term diabetes control.
- Fasting blood sugar (as needed): ₦500 – ₦2,000 per test at most labs, sometimes free at pharmacies during health awareness days.
Annually, you should also budget for a lipid panel (₦4,000 – ₦8,000), kidney function tests (₦5,000 – ₦10,000), and an eye exam (₦3,000 – ₦15,000). These complication-screening tests are not optional — they catch problems while they're still cheap to fix.
4. Doctor Consultations
Routine reviews with a doctor cost ₦3,000 to ₦15,000 per visit at a private clinic. Public teaching hospitals like LUTH, UCH, and UNTH charge far less (often ₦500 to ₦3,000) but come with long waiting times. Most stable diabetics need a review every two to three months, so annual consultation costs run from ₦10,000 to ₦80,000.
5. Diet Adjustments
Contrary to popular belief, a diabetic diet in Nigeria is not necessarily more expensive — but it is more deliberate. Beans, eggs, leafy vegetables, pepper soup, unripe plantain, and fish are all diabetes-friendly and locally affordable. The real cost comes from swapping cheap white bread, white rice, and sugary drinks for wholegrains, brown rice, and water. In many cases this is neutral or even cheaper over time.
Sample Monthly Budgets
Here's what three realistic Nigerian diabetic profiles spend each month in 2026:
| Profile | Meds | Strips | Other | Monthly total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newly diagnosed Type 2 (metformin, 2 tests/day) | ₦3,500 | ₦18,000 | ₦2,500 | ₦24,000 |
| Stable Type 2 (metformin, 3 tests/week) | ₦3,500 | ₦4,500 | ₦1,500 | ₦9,500 |
| Insulin-dependent (Mixtard, 2 tests/day) | ₦22,000 | ₦18,000 | ₦3,000 | ₦43,000 |
"Other" includes monthly consultation share, pro-rated HbA1c, and small incidentals. These ranges are conservative — if you buy branded drugs in Lagos Island pharmacies, expect 30–60% more.
How Costs Differ Across Nigerian Cities
Where you live has a bigger impact on your diabetes budget than most patients realise. Lagos pharmacies — especially on the Island — tend to stock more imported brands and charge accordingly. Abuja follows closely behind, with Kano, Ibadan, Enugu, and Port Harcourt usually 15 to 30% cheaper for the same drug. Smaller cities and towns often carry fewer brand choices but lower prices.
Strip availability is the other big regional factor. If you're buying a glucometer in Lagos, confirm that its strips are also stocked in Owerri, Jos, or wherever family or travel takes you. A month without strips is a month of blind management.
Teaching hospitals (LUTH, UCH, ABUTH, UNTH, UNILORTH) often have in-house pharmacies with subsidised rates for registered chronic-disease patients. If you haven't registered at one, it's worth the paperwork day. Over a year, the savings can cover a decent home BP monitor or a quarterly HbA1c test.
The Hidden Cost: Complications
The single most expensive thing about diabetes is not the medication — it's the complications of poorly-controlled diabetes. A single stroke can cost ₦500,000 to ₦2 million in the first month (ICU, imaging, drugs, rehabilitation). Foot amputation surgery runs from ₦300,000 to ₦1 million. Dialysis for diabetic kidney failure costs ₦40,000 to ₦60,000 per session, three times weekly. A single diabetic retinopathy laser treatment is ₦50,000 to ₦150,000.
The maths is brutal but clarifying: spending ₦10,000 to ₦20,000 a month on consistent daily management is always cheaper than spending ₦500,000 treating a preventable crisis. Every missed metformin dose, every untested week, every skipped check-up is a small bet against that maths.
How to Lower Your Monthly Diabetes Cost
Most Nigerian diabetics can cut their monthly bill by 20–40% without compromising control. Here's how:
- Switch to generic metformin. Emzor and Fidson make WHO-quality metformin for a fraction of Glucophage's price. Your pharmacist can recommend a trusted generic.
- Buy strips in bulk online. HealthPlus, MedPlus, and Shoprite Pharmacy sometimes offer pack deals. Strips bought one-at-a-time at local chemists cost the most.
- Use public teaching hospitals for specialist care. A diabetologist at LUTH or UCH costs a fraction of a private endocrinologist and is equally qualified.
- Enrol in NHIS or your state health insurance. Lagos, Kaduna, and Ogun run state schemes that subsidise chronic-disease care for enrollees.
- Check your blood sugar strategically, not obsessively. Once you're stable, three to four tests weekly at the right moments (fasting, 2 hours after a meal) tell you more than five random tests daily.
- Invest in a good glucometer once. A ₦15,000 meter with ₦250 strips beats a ₦5,000 meter with ₦500 strips within the first year.
- Don't skip doses to save money. The cost of one hospitalisation wipes out three years of medication savings.
💡 AFYA tip: Track every dose and every reading in one place. Patients who log consistently spend on average 18% less on diabetes care within six months because they catch drift early, avoid emergencies, and negotiate prices more effectively with pharmacists.
How AFYA Helps You Manage the Cost of Diabetes in Nigeria
The biggest cost driver in Nigerian diabetes care is not the drug price — it's the avoidable crisis caused by inconsistent management. AFYA helps close that gap.
- Medication reminders so you never skip a metformin or insulin dose
- A blood sugar log that shows your real trends, not random spot readings
- A 24/7 AI health companion (VITA) that answers questions like "can I skip metformin today?" in plain English
- Monthly summaries you can show your doctor — so a ₦10,000 consultation does more real work
- Early warning when your readings drift, before it becomes a hospital bill
All of this for ₦2,500 a month — less than the cost of a single HbA1c test.
Manage diabetes affordably with AFYA
Track blood sugar, never miss a dose, and get 24/7 guidance from our AI companion — all for ₦2,500/month.
Start tracking free with AFYA →⚕️ Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Drug and test prices are estimates based on April 2026 market surveys and vary by city, pharmacy, and brand. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for treatment decisions. AFYA is not a medical device and does not provide diagnosis or treatment.