Today’s Dollar to Naira Exchange Rate – October 30, 2025

The naira appreciated in official trading today, while the parallel (black) market remained weaker, highlighting the ongoing disparity between electronic foreign exchange platforms and street dealers.
At the Daily Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market (NFEM) — the official interbank benchmark rate — the dollar traded around ₦1,452.8/$ on October 30, 2025. This reflects a steady strengthening trend in the official market compared to earlier October levels. In contrast, Lagos parallel-market dealers quoted the dollar between ₦1,480 and ₦1,495, buying at ₦1,480 and selling up to ₦1,495. This leaves the parallel market roughly ₦25–₦40 weaker than the NFEM rate. Despite improvements in official FX liquidity, the parallel spread remains a key reference for importers and retailers.
Reasons for the gap
Recent Central Bank policies and better FX liquidity — supported by electronic matching platforms — have stabilized and boosted the naira in the official market. The CBN’s decision to trim its policy rate in September, alongside signs of easing inflation, has further strengthened the currency’s position.
However, ongoing structural challenges, restricted access to official FX for some businesses, and high retail demand continue to sustain the parallel market and its wide spreads. Reports indicate the naira hit record highs earlier in the week before stabilizing at today’s levels.
Implications
- For importers and consumers: When official FX is scarce, importers rely on parallel-market rates, which keeps import and retail prices elevated.
- For investors: A narrower official rate and clearer monetary direction boost investor confidence, though the gap between markets signals lingering inefficiencies that warrant close attention.





