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Short Description: A complete guide to Nigeria’s Subject to Regularization (STR) Visa for foreign employees: eligibility, documents, process, residence permit steps, and risks.

Last Verified On: April 5, 2026

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country Nigeria
Visa name Subject to Regularization Visa
Visa short name STR
Category Long-stay work entry visa leading to residence/work regularization
Main purpose Entry for foreign nationals taking up approved employment in Nigeria
Typical applicant Foreign employee hired by a Nigerian company, organization, mission, or approved entity
Validity Commonly issued as an entry visa; exact visa validity label can vary by mission and issuance details
Stay duration Used to enter Nigeria and then complete post-arrival regularization, including residence/work authorization
Entries allowed Usually tied to entry for employment regularization; confirm single vs multiple entry on the visa sticker/official approval
Extension possible? Yes, but usually through in-country residence permit/CERPAC and expatriate quota compliance rather than “extending” the entry visa itself
Work allowed? Yes, for the approved employer/approved role after regularization
Study allowed? Limited; this is not a student route
Family allowed? Possible, but dependents generally need their own appropriate visas/status
PR path? Possible indirectly through long-term lawful residence, not by STR alone
Citizenship path? Indirect only, through longer-term lawful residence and later naturalization rules if eligible

Nigeria’s Subject to Regularization Visa (STR) is the main pre-entry work visa used by foreign nationals who are coming to Nigeria to take up long-term employment with an approved Nigerian employer.

In plain English:

  • the STR visa lets a foreign employee enter Nigeria for employment purposes
  • after arrival, the person must complete regularization inside Nigeria
  • that regularization typically leads to the person’s Combined Expatriate Residence Permit and Aliens Card (CERPAC) and lawful residence/work status

This visa exists because Nigeria separates:

  1. entry clearance abroad for employment, and
  2. post-arrival regularization/residence authorization inside Nigeria.

So the STR is not the final immigration status by itself. It is best understood as a work entry visa that must be regularized after arrival.

How it fits into Nigeria’s immigration system

For most foreign employees, the sequence is:

  1. Nigerian employer obtains or uses an approved Expatriate Quota position
  2. Employer secures relevant approvals/supporting documents
  3. Worker applies abroad for an STR visa
  4. Worker enters Nigeria
  5. Employer/employee completes regularization with the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS)
  6. Worker receives/maintains CERPAC and related lawful stay/work documentation

Is it a visa, permit, or status?

It is best classified as:

  • a sticker visa / entry clearance issued outside Nigeria, and
  • part of a hybrid work-residence pathway, because it leads to in-country regularization

It is not the same thing as:

  • a tourist visa
  • a business visa for short meetings
  • a Temporary Work Permit (TWP)
  • a residence permit by itself

Alternate names and labels

Official and commonly used names include:

  • Subject to Regularization Visa
  • STR Visa
  • sometimes described on official platforms as a visa for foreigners entering Nigeria for employment and requiring regularization after arrival

The exact wording may vary slightly across:

  • Nigerian embassies/high commissions
  • the Nigeria Immigration Service visa portal
  • Ministry of Interior materials

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best suited for

Employees

This is the core target group.

Apply for STR if you:

  • have a genuine job offer from a Nigerian employer
  • will work in Nigeria beyond short-term assignment limits
  • are being hired into an approved expatriate role
  • will regularize your stay after arrival

Researchers

It may be suitable where:

  • the Nigerian host institution is employing you formally, and
  • your role is structured as employment requiring work/residence authorization

Religious workers

Potentially suitable if:

  • the religious body in Nigeria is employing or assigning you in a formal expatriate post, and
  • all immigration approvals are in place

Artists, athletes, and special technical staff

It may be suitable if the arrangement is:

  • longer-term employment in Nigeria, not a short engagement

Investors/founders

Sometimes relevant if:

  • the founder or investor is also being appointed into a formal expatriate role in a Nigerian entity with proper approvals

But many business founders confuse STR with business-entry visas. If your trip is for setup meetings only, STR may be the wrong route.

Usually not suitable for

Tourists

Do not use STR for:

  • holidays
  • family visits without employment
  • general travel

Use a visitor/tourist route if available for your nationality and purpose.

Business visitors

Do not use STR just for:

  • meetings
  • conferences
  • negotiations
  • site visits
  • exploratory trips

A Business Visa is usually the appropriate route for short business visits.

Job seekers

Nigeria’s STR is not a job-seeker visa.
You generally need the job first, plus employer support and immigration documentation.

Students

Do not use STR for full-time study unless your primary basis is approved employment and study is only incidental.

Digital nomads

Nigeria does not publicly operate the STR as a digital nomad visa. Remote workers without a Nigerian employer should be cautious; the STR is not the correct route for general remote work-from-Nigeria situations.

Transit passengers

Not applicable. Use a transit-appropriate route if required.

Medical travelers

Not applicable. STR is not a medical treatment visa.

Diplomats and official travelers

These travelers use diplomatic/official visa channels, not STR.

Quick fit guide

Applicant type STR suitable? Notes
Foreign employee hired by Nigerian company Yes Main use case
Short-term technician Usually no Often TWP may be more appropriate
Tourist No Wrong category
Business visitor for meetings No Use business route
Student Usually no Not a study route
Job seeker without offer No Must usually have employer sponsorship
Entrepreneur moving to run Nigerian company Possibly Depends on role, structure, and approvals
Dependent spouse/child No, not usually as principal STR Dependents typically need separate dependent processing

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted purpose

The STR is used for:

  • entering Nigeria to take up approved employment
  • beginning a long-term work assignment
  • completing post-arrival immigration regularization
  • obtaining residence/work authorization linked to the approved employer

Usually permitted related activities

If tied to the approved employment, the applicant may generally:

  • reside in Nigeria lawfully after regularization
  • perform work for the sponsoring/approved employer
  • carry out duties consistent with the approved job role

Prohibited or inappropriate uses

Do not use STR for:

  • tourism
  • casual visits
  • business meetings only
  • job hunting
  • freelance remote work without proper Nigerian employment basis
  • unpaid volunteering unrelated to the approved employment framework
  • journalism unless separately cleared where required
  • study as the main purpose
  • medical travel as the main purpose
  • transit
  • marriage-only travel
  • undeclared commercial activity different from the sponsored job

Grey areas and common misunderstandings

STR vs business visa

A common mistake is thinking a business visa allows long-term work. It generally does not. If you will actually be employed in Nigeria, STR is usually the proper route.

STR vs Temporary Work Permit

Nigeria also uses Temporary Work Permit (TWP) for short-term specialized assignments. If the assignment is brief, project-based, or installation/repair-specific, TWP may be more suitable than STR.

Remote work

Official public guidance is not always explicit on foreign remote work scenarios. If you are physically residing in Nigeria and performing work, especially over the long term, you should not assume visitor/business status covers it. STR is designed for actual Nigerian employment, not open-ended digital nomad arrangements.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

Subject to Regularization Visa

Short name

STR

Long name

Subject to Regularization Visa

Related permit names

The STR route is closely connected to:

  • Expatriate Quota approval
  • Regularization of Stay
  • Combined Expatriate Residence Permit and Aliens Card (CERPAC)

Categories commonly confused with STR

Category How it differs from STR
Business Visa For short business visits, not regular employment
Temporary Work Permit (TWP) For short-term work assignments, not the standard long-term employment route
Tourist/Visitor Visa No employment authorization
ECOWAS free movement entry Applies only to qualifying ECOWAS nationals and does not automatically replace all work/residence compliance obligations

Old vs current naming

The visa is still widely referred to as STR in current official practice. Some portal wording and embassy wording may differ slightly, but the core concept remains the same.

5. Eligibility criteria

Core eligibility

To qualify, applicants generally need:

  • a valid passport
  • a genuine offer of employment in Nigeria
  • a sponsoring Nigerian employer/entity
  • supporting immigration documents from the employer
  • a role that fits within Nigeria’s expatriate employment framework
  • intention to regularize after arrival

Nationality rules

Nigeria’s visa requirements can vary by nationality and mission practice. Most foreign nationals needing an employment entry visa for Nigeria will require STR if they are taking up long-term employment.

Important: ECOWAS nationals may benefit from regional movement rights, but work/residence compliance can still involve additional local steps. Rules are not identical for all nationalities.

Passport validity

Applicants generally need a passport with sufficient validity. Many missions expect at least 6 months validity, though applicants should verify exact mission-specific requirements.

Age

No general public rule suggests a fixed age threshold unique to STR, but the applicant must be legally employable and supported by valid employment documentation.

Education and experience

There is no single universal published degree threshold for all STR applicants, but the employer’s expatriate position and supporting documents may require evidence of:

  • qualifications
  • professional licenses
  • work experience
  • CV/résumé

This is especially true where the job title is specialized.

Language

No points-based or universal language-test requirement is publicly emphasized for STR.

Sponsorship

This is a sponsor-driven route. The sponsoring organization is usually essential.

The sponsor is typically:

  • a Nigerian-registered company
  • an approved organization
  • a mission/institution
  • another entity recognized for expatriate employment purposes

Invitation or job offer

A genuine employment offer is central. Publicly available materials often reflect the need for:

  • an offer/appointment/employment letter
  • evidence tied to expatriate quota approval
  • employer request/support letters

Points requirement

Not applicable for this visa.

Relationship proof

Only relevant if dependents are applying separately or alongside in family categories.

Admission letter

Not applicable unless the person also has a study component, which is not the usual STR basis.

Business/investment thresholds

No general public investment threshold defines STR eligibility itself. If the applicant is an investor/founder, the relevant issue is usually whether there is a proper employer-employee or approved expatriate position basis.

Maintenance funds

Public official materials focus more on sponsorship and employment documentation than a fixed personal-funds threshold. Some missions may still expect proof that the applicant can maintain themselves initially.

Accommodation proof

May be requested depending on mission or application setup, but it is not always the headline STR requirement in public official lists.

Onward travel

Applicants may need travel itinerary or ticket details depending on mission requirements.

Health

Medical clearance may become relevant during residence regularization or by specific mission instruction.

Character / criminal record

Applicants may be asked for police clearance depending on the mission, nationality, role, or supporting process.

Insurance

Public official STR guidance is not always consistent on mandatory private insurance at visa stage. Verify with the embassy/mission handling your case.

Biometrics

Biometrics may be required depending on process and application center arrangements.

Intent requirements

You must show that your purpose is genuine employment with regularization. This is not a “temporary visitor but maybe work later” route.

Residency outside Nigeria

As a standard rule, the STR is applied for abroad before travel, usually in the applicant’s country of residence or where the mission accepts jurisdiction.

Local registration rules

After entry, regularization and CERPAC steps are crucial. This is one of the defining features of the STR route.

Quotas/caps

The major structural limit is not a public lottery or cap; it is the employer’s Expatriate Quota approval and compliance environment.

Embassy-specific rules

Yes. Missions can differ in:

  • appointment systems
  • submission format
  • extra documents
  • interview expectations
  • payment handling

Special exemptions

Possible for certain official/diplomatic categories or treaty/regional movement contexts, but these are not general STR exemptions.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Common ineligibility issues

You may be ineligible or face refusal if:

  • you do not have a real job offer
  • the employer cannot support the case properly
  • the role does not fit approved expatriate employment arrangements
  • the visa purpose does not match your documents
  • your passport is invalid or too close to expiry
  • documents appear inconsistent or unverifiable
  • prior immigration violations raise concerns

Typical refusal triggers

Wrong visa class

Applying for STR when the case is actually:

  • short-term technical work
  • business meetings only
  • tourism
  • job search

Weak employer documentation

This is a major issue. Problems include:

  • poor sponsor letter
  • missing expatriate quota support
  • unclear corporate identity
  • unsigned letters
  • mismatch between job title and quota position

Incomplete application

Missing:

  • passport pages
  • application form details
  • employment letter
  • corporate support documents
  • photos
  • payment proof

Suspicious or unverifiable documents

Any signs of:

  • fake company documents
  • altered bank statements
  • inconsistent signatures
  • incorrect dates
  • contradictory job information

can lead to refusal and broader immigration consequences.

Insufficient evidence of purpose

If the officer cannot tell:

  • what the applicant will do,
  • for whom,
  • for how long,
  • under what legal approval,

the case is weak.

Prior overstays or immigration violations

Previous issues in Nigeria or elsewhere can trigger extra scrutiny.

Criminal, medical, or security concerns

These may lead to refusal or delay.

Poor interview performance

If interviewed, applicants sometimes create problems by:

  • giving a different job title than the letter
  • not knowing the employer
  • describing visitor activities instead of employment
  • contradicting documents

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • lawful entry for long-term employment
  • pathway to in-country regularization
  • basis for obtaining CERPAC/residence authorization
  • ability to work legally for the approved employer after regularization
  • possible platform for longer-term residence in Nigeria

Family-related benefits

While the principal STR is for the worker, it can support family relocation planning where dependents obtain appropriate statuses separately.

Duration benefits

Unlike short-stay business or TWP routes, STR is designed for longer-term employment structures.

Conversion/renewal benefits

The route can lead to:

  • regularized lawful stay
  • annual or ongoing residence/work compliance through CERPAC and employer sponsorship

PR/citizenship relevance

STR itself is not permanent residence, but long-term lawful stay through the work/residence framework may matter for future residence history.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Main restrictions

  • tied to approved employment purpose
  • not a general open work visa
  • not suitable for tourism or casual business travel
  • usually linked to a particular employer and role framework
  • requires post-arrival regularization

Employer dependence

In practice, the worker’s legal status is strongly connected to the sponsoring employer and underlying quota approval.

No broad self-employment freedom

STR is generally not an unrestricted self-employment route.

Reporting and compliance obligations

You may need to maintain:

  • valid residence documentation
  • employer-linked immigration compliance
  • renewals on time
  • accurate personal records

Travel/re-entry limitations

Check your actual visa sticker and later residence status carefully. Do not assume all stages allow unlimited re-entry.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Visa validity

The STR is an entry visa. Exact validity and entry terms may vary by issuance details and mission.

Stay duration

The important practical point is that the applicant is expected to:

  • enter Nigeria using STR, then
  • complete regularization promptly

The long-term stay is usually based on the regularized residence/work status, not merely the sticker visa.

Single or multiple entry

This can vary. Many applicants treat the initial STR as primarily for entry to start the regularization process. Verify the actual visa endorsement.

When the clock starts

Usually from issuance/entry as stated on the visa, but lawful long-term stay after arrival depends heavily on completing regularization and maintaining CERPAC/work authorization.

Grace periods

Public guidance is not always clear on any uniform grace period. Do not rely on informal assumptions.

Overstay consequences

Overstaying or failing to regularize can lead to:

  • fines
  • status violations
  • future visa difficulty
  • possible enforcement action

Renewal timing

The entry visa itself is not the main long-term instrument to “renew.” The practical renewal focus is usually:

  • CERPAC
  • residence/work compliance
  • employer-linked approvals

10. Complete document checklist

Warning: Exact STR document lists can vary by embassy/high commission and by the employer’s case structure. Always cross-check the mission handling your application.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Visa application form Official visa form/portal submission Starts the case Typos, mismatch with passport/employment letter
Payment receipt Proof of paid visa fee Confirms fee compliance Missing receipt or wrong payment reference
Cover letter if requested Applicant explanation letter Clarifies purpose Too vague, inconsistent with employer letter

B. Identity/travel documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Passport Valid travel document Identity and travel authority Less than 6 months validity, damaged passport
Bio-data page copy Passport identity page copy Review and filing Unclear scan
Passport photos Recent photos meeting specs Visa issuance Wrong size/background/old photo

C. Financial documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Personal bank statements if requested Recent statements May support maintenance ability Large unexplained deposits
Employer financial undertaking if requested Sponsor support proof Shows corporate support No signature, no letterhead

D. Employment/business documents

These are usually central for STR.

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Employment/appointment letter Formal job offer or appointment Proves the role Job title mismatch
Employer support letter Sponsor request for STR Explains why worker is needed Generic wording
Expatriate Quota approval documents Employer’s approved expatriate slot evidence Core immigration basis Missing pages, expired quota, wrong position
Acceptance of offer by employee Signed acceptance if requested Confirms mutual employment intent Unsigned or undated
Company incorporation documents CAC or equivalent registration evidence Confirms employer legality Unclear copies
Tax clearance or company compliance documents if requested Regulatory compliance evidence May support legitimacy Old or partial records
CV/résumé Applicant’s work profile Supports suitability Dates inconsistent with job letter
Qualification certificates Degrees/professional certificates Supports specialized role Missing translations or name mismatch

E. Education documents

Where relevant:

  • degree certificates
  • transcripts
  • professional licenses
  • training certificates

Common issue: qualifications not matching the specialized role described.

F. Relationship/family documents

For dependents where applicable:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • custody/consent documents for children
  • passport copies of family members

G. Accommodation/travel documents

If requested:

  • flight itinerary
  • hotel booking or host accommodation details
  • address in Nigeria

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

Typically very important:

  • invitation/support letter from employer
  • corporate registration documents
  • contact person details
  • expatriate quota documents
  • undertaking letters where required

I. Health/insurance documents

Depending on mission or later in-country steps:

  • medical report if requested
  • vaccination or health documents if required by current public health rules
  • insurance documents if specifically requested

J. Country-specific extras

Some embassies may ask for:

  • residence permit in country of application
  • local ID
  • police clearance
  • notarized corporate papers
  • proof of legal stay if applying from a third country

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • parental consent
  • custody orders
  • adoption papers
  • school letters if relevant
  • notarized authorization for single-parent travel

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

If documents are not in English, certified translation may be needed.
Some missions may expect notarization or legalization for civil documents. This varies.

M. Photo specifications

Check the mission’s latest photo rules. Common mistakes:

  • incorrect background
  • shadowed face
  • old photo
  • glasses glare
  • wrong dimensions

11. Financial requirements

Is there a fixed minimum fund requirement?

For STR, publicly available official guidance usually emphasizes:

  • genuine employment
  • sponsor support
  • employer documents

rather than a single universal personal bank balance requirement.

That said, some missions may still want evidence that the applicant can support initial travel and settlement.

Who can sponsor?

Usually:

  • the Nigerian employer
  • the employing institution/organization

Family or friends are generally not the main basis for STR sponsorship.

Acceptable proof

Where requested, acceptable financial support may include:

  • recent bank statements
  • salary offer details
  • employer maintenance undertaking
  • corporate support letters

Seasoning rules

No uniform public seasoning rule is clearly published for STR. But if bank statements are requested, unexplained recent deposits can cause concern.

Hidden costs

Applicants often underestimate:

  • document certification
  • police certificates
  • translations
  • courier
  • travel to mission
  • in-country regularization/CERPAC costs
  • employer-side compliance costs

Proof-strength tips

Official-rule side: – submit exactly what the mission requests

Practical side: – if a statement shows a large deposit, explain it transparently with evidence – make sure salary in offer letter matches employment documents – do not overload the file with irrelevant banking material

12. Fees and total cost

Warning: Nigeria visa fees can vary by nationality, reciprocity arrangements, visa location, and policy updates. Use the latest official fee source before payment.

Possible cost components

Cost item Notes
Visa application fee Varies by nationality and visa class
Processing/service fee May apply depending on portal or mission process
Biometrics fee If collected through application center arrangements
Courier fee If passport return is couriered
Police certificate cost Depends on issuing country
Medical exam cost If required
Translation/notary/legalization Varies significantly
Travel to embassy/consulate Applicant-specific
Post-arrival regularization/CERPAC costs Important and often separate from visa issuance

Exact fees

Because fees are updated and can depend on nationality/mission, the safest guidance is:

  • check the latest official Nigerian visa fee page
  • confirm whether STR carries reciprocity-based pricing for your nationality
  • ask the mission whether any local collection/service charge applies

Refunds

Visa fees are typically not refundable once processing has begun, unless official policy states otherwise.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm STR is the correct visa

Make sure your case is genuine long-term employment in Nigeria, not short-term work or business travel.

2. Ensure the employer has the proper foundation

This often includes:

  • expatriate quota approval
  • company support documents
  • formal job offer/appointment documents

3. Gather documents

Collect your:

  • passport
  • photos
  • employer letters
  • quota-related documents
  • qualifications
  • any mission-specific extras

4. Complete the official application

Nigeria operates official online visa/application systems for many routes. Complete the form carefully.

5. Pay the fee

Use the official payment route linked to the authorized Nigerian government system or as instructed by the mission.

6. Book appointment if required

Some missions require:

  • interview
  • biometrics
  • in-person submission

7. Submit application and documents

Submission may be:

  • directly at the mission, or
  • through the mission’s instructed channel

8. Attend interview/biometrics if requested

Bring originals and copies.

9. Wait for processing

Respond promptly to any request for:

  • missing documents
  • employer clarifications
  • corrected forms

10. Receive decision

If approved, your passport is returned with the STR visa sticker or official approval.

11. Travel to Nigeria

Carry your full support pack, not just the passport and visa.

12. Complete post-arrival regularization

This is critical. Typically the employer coordinates with NIS for:

  • regularization of stay
  • CERPAC issuance/activation
  • lawful residence/work documentation

13. Maintain compliance

Renew and update documentation as required.

14. Processing time

Official standard times

A single uniform processing time for all STR applications is not always publicly stated in one clear official source. Timing varies by:

  • embassy/high commission
  • nationality
  • document completeness
  • internal clearances
  • employer documentation quality

What affects timing?

  • incomplete applications
  • poor employer paperwork
  • need for verification
  • security/background review
  • peak travel seasons
  • public holidays
  • mission staffing

Practical expectation

Applicants should allow:

  • time for employer-side preparation before visa filing
  • mission processing time
  • post-arrival regularization time

Pro Tip: For employment start dates, build a timeline that includes both visa issuance and in-country regularization, not just the visa appointment.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

May be required depending on the mission/process. Confirm locally.

Interview

Not every applicant is interviewed, but some missions may require one.

Typical interview themes

  • What company are you joining?
  • What is your job title?
  • Where will you work in Nigeria?
  • How long is the assignment?
  • Who is sponsoring your application?
  • Do your qualifications match the role?

Medicals

A universal publicly stated pre-visa medical rule for all STR cases is not always clearly published, but medical requirements may arise in particular cases or in-country compliance stages.

Police checks

These may be requested depending on the mission, role, nationality, or case specifics.

Exemptions

Mission-specific. There is no universal public exemption rule to assume.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official approval data

Public official approval-rate statistics for Nigeria STR visas are not generally published in a detailed, applicant-facing way.

Practical refusal patterns

The most common patterns appear to be:

  • weak or missing expatriate quota evidence
  • employer documents that do not align with the worker’s role
  • inconsistencies between application form and supporting letters
  • applying for STR when TWP or business visa is the real category
  • unverifiable company or job details
  • passport/document issues

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Focus on internal consistency

Your application should tell one clear story:

  • who you are
  • what role you will fill
  • why you were hired
  • which company is sponsoring you
  • how the employer is authorized to employ an expatriate
  • what happens after arrival

Practical strengthening steps

Use a precise employer letter

It should clearly state:

  • employee name
  • nationality
  • passport number
  • job title
  • work location
  • start date
  • duration/terms
  • reference to relevant quota approval
  • commitment to regularization after arrival

Match all details across documents

Your:

  • application form
  • employment letter
  • support letter
  • CV
  • qualification certificates

should all align on core facts.

Explain unusual issues up front

Examples:

  • name variation across degrees/passport
  • recent passport renewal
  • large bank deposit
  • previous visa refusal elsewhere

Submit readable scans

Immigration officers should not have to guess what they are reading.

Include only relevant evidence

A well-organized file is stronger than a bloated one.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

Pro Tip: Ask the employer for a single, consolidated employment packet before you apply. That packet should include: – support/request letter – appointment letter – expatriate quota evidence – company registration papers – contact person details

This reduces contradictions.

Pro Tip: If your qualifications are essential to the role, place them immediately after the job letter in your document pack.

Pro Tip: Use a short applicant note to explain any mismatch in names, dates, old passports, or previous immigration history.

Common Mistake: Applicants rely on the employer to “handle everything” and never review their own file. Read every letter yourself.

Pro Tip: If applying through a Nigerian mission outside your nationality country, verify first that the mission accepts applicants who are merely visiting there. Some require legal residence in that country.

Pro Tip: If your start date is fixed, ask the employer to avoid drafting unrealistically tight onboarding dates. Delays in visa or regularization are common.

Warning: Never use an STR for undeclared side work or a different employer than the one supporting the application.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

Is it needed?

Not always mandatory, but it can be useful where:

  • the case is document-heavy
  • there is a name discrepancy
  • you are applying from a third country
  • your background needs explanation
  • the mission tends to appreciate a structured applicant explanation

Good structure

  1. Applicant identity
  2. Purpose of travel
  3. Employer details
  4. Job title and reason for entry
  5. Mention of attached key documents
  6. Confirmation of intent to regularize after arrival
  7. Any clarifications
  8. Polite closing

What to say

Keep it factual:

  • “I have been offered the position of…”
  • “My sponsoring employer is…”
  • “I am applying for an STR visa to enter Nigeria for employment and complete regularization upon arrival.”

What not to say

Do not:

  • over-explain irrelevant personal history
  • mention tourism if your purpose is work
  • imply you may work for others
  • contradict the employer’s timeline or role

Sample outline

  • Subject line: STR Visa Application – [Full Name, Passport Number]
  • Paragraph 1: Identity and purpose
  • Paragraph 2: Employer and job role
  • Paragraph 3: Attached supporting documents
  • Paragraph 4: Compliance/regularization statement
  • Paragraph 5: Closing

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who can sponsor?

Usually the Nigerian employer or institution hiring the applicant.

Sponsor obligations

In practice, the sponsor often needs to provide:

  • formal support/request letter
  • proof of company registration
  • expatriate quota evidence
  • contact details
  • immigration follow-through for regularization

Good invitation/support letter structure

  • company letterhead
  • date
  • embassy/consulate addressed correctly
  • employee’s full identity
  • position title
  • purpose of entry
  • work location
  • duration
  • confirmation of quota support
  • confirmation that regularization/CERPAC will be handled
  • authorized signatory and contact details

Sponsor mistakes

Common problems:

  • wrong embassy address
  • vague job description
  • no reference to quota approval
  • unsigned letters
  • inconsistent company names
  • no contact person

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, family relocation may be possible, but dependents usually need their own appropriate visa/status processing. The principal worker’s STR does not automatically grant family status to everyone.

Who qualifies?

Generally:

  • spouse
  • dependent children

Exact treatment may vary by mission and immigration practice.

Proof required

Typically:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • passport copies
  • evidence of relationship
  • custody/consent documents for minors where relevant

Work/study rights of dependents

These are not automatically assumed. A dependent’s right to work or study may require separate permission or different status.

Unmarried partners

Public official treatment may be more restrictive and less clearly documented than for legally married spouses. Applicants should verify directly with the Nigerian mission.

Same-sex spouses/partners

This is a legally sensitive area in Nigeria. Public law and practice may create significant recognition problems for same-sex spouse/partner immigration claims. Applicants in this situation should verify directly with the relevant mission and, if necessary, seek specialist legal advice.

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Work rights

Yes, but specifically for the approved employment basis and after proper regularization.

Self-employment

Generally not the core design of STR unless the person is lawfully structured within an approved corporate/employment framework.

Side income

Do not assume broad permission for side gigs, freelancing, or work for another employer.

Remote work

Not clearly established as a free-standing right under STR unless it is part of the approved employment role.

Study rights

Incidental study may be possible, but STR is not a general student visa.

Short courses

Likely possible if they do not conflict with the primary employment status and any required permissions.

Business meetings

Yes, if part of your job role. But STR is not needed for meetings alone.

Receiving payment in Nigeria

The route is built for lawful employment compensation under the approved work arrangement.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

An STR visa allows you to travel to Nigeria, but border officers still make the final admission decision.

Documents to carry

Bring:

  • passport with STR visa
  • printed job/appointment letter
  • employer support letter
  • quota-related documents or copies
  • accommodation/contact details
  • return/onward travel details if requested
  • copies of key qualifications if relevant

At the border

Be ready to answer:

  • who employs you
  • where you will stay
  • what your role is
  • who will meet/support you

Re-entry

Do not assume your initial visa automatically covers all future travel. Once in Nigeria, confirm the travel implications of your regularized status/CERPAC.

New passport issues

If your passport changes, ask NIS/employer how to align your residence/work records with the new passport.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can STR be extended?

The initial STR visa is not usually the main document that gets “extended” for long-term stay. The real long-term pathway is:

  • in-country regularization
  • CERPAC issuance/renewal
  • ongoing employer compliance

Can you renew inside Nigeria?

Yes, residence/work documentation linked to legal stay is generally managed in-country after entry.

Can you switch employers?

Not freely. Because the status is employer-linked, changing employers can require fresh immigration steps and new sponsorship/quota support.

Can you switch from visitor to worker inside Nigeria?

Do not assume this is allowed. For most applicants, the correct route is to obtain the proper work-entry visa first. Verify current NIS practice.

Restoration or bridging status

No broad publicly stated “bridging visa” system comparable to some countries is commonly advertised for this route. Avoid lapses.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does STR itself give PR?

No.

Can it lead indirectly to long-term residence?

Yes, indirectly, if the worker remains lawfully resident over time through the proper residence/work framework.

Does time count toward citizenship?

Potentially, but citizenship/naturalization in Nigeria is governed by constitutional and legal rules that are far broader than the STR process itself.

Important caution

Long-term work presence alone does not guarantee permanent residence or citizenship. Applicants must distinguish between:

  • visa entry
  • residence authorization
  • long-term settlement
  • naturalization eligibility

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax issues

If you live and work in Nigeria, you may create Nigerian tax obligations. Immigration approval does not replace tax compliance.

Employer reporting

The employer may have obligations around:

  • immigration compliance
  • payroll/tax handling
  • expatriate records

Local ID / residence card

CERPAC is a major compliance document for expatriate residence.

Address and record updates

If your employer, role, passport, or address changes, report/regularize as required.

Overstay and status violations

Failure to renew or regularize can create:

  • fines
  • irregular status
  • difficulty exiting/re-entering
  • future visa refusals

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

ECOWAS nationals

ECOWAS free movement rules may give qualifying nationals easier entry rights than many non-ECOWAS applicants. However:

  • this does not automatically erase all work/residence compliance steps
  • local documentation and work authorization obligations may still apply

Reciprocity-based fees

Visa fees can vary significantly by nationality.

Diplomatic/official passports

Separate rules may apply.

Applying from third countries

Some missions may only accept applicants who are resident, not just present, in that country.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not typically principal STR applicants unless in unusual lawful employment contexts. For dependents, extra consent/custody evidence is often needed.

Divorced/separated parents

Children may require:

  • custody orders
  • notarized consent from the non-traveling parent

Adopted children

Expect adoption and legal custody documents.

Stateless persons / refugees

Rules are highly case-specific and may require direct mission guidance.

Dual nationals

Use the passport with which you are applying consistently. If you hold multiple passports, avoid document mismatch.

Prior refusals

Disclose prior refusals honestly if asked. Concealment is worse than the refusal itself.

Criminal records

These can affect eligibility and should be reviewed carefully.

Urgent travel

Mission willingness to expedite varies. Do not book non-refundable travel too early.

Expired passport but valid visa

If the visa is in an old passport and you have a new passport, verify travel and transfer rules before departure.

Change of name

Provide clear documentary linkage between old and new names.

Gender marker/document mismatch

Where documents differ, include explanation and legal evidence if available. Mission practice may vary.

Previous deportation/removal

This is a serious issue and should be addressed transparently with professional help where needed.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
STR is just a tourist visa you can later convert easily No. It is a work-entry route tied to regularization
A business visa lets you take up full employment in Nigeria Usually no
Once STR is issued, you can work for any company No, status is generally employer-linked
You only need the visa; CERPAC is optional False. Post-arrival regularization is central
Any invitation letter is enough No. Employer and quota documents are often crucial
Dependents automatically get work rights Not automatically
You can hide a previous refusal because it was in another country Never a good idea; honesty is safer

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

What happens after refusal?

You should receive a refusal outcome through the mission/process used.

Is there an appeal?

A universally published formal appeal framework for all STR refusals is not always clearly stated in applicant-facing guidance. Availability may depend on:

  • mission procedure
  • reason for refusal
  • administrative practice

Administrative review or reconsideration

Not always clearly available as a formal right.

Reapplication

Often the practical route is to fix the refusal issue and reapply.

No refund

Fees are generally not refunded after processing.

When to reapply

Reapply only after the refusal ground is properly addressed, such as:

  • corrected employer documents
  • stronger quota evidence
  • complete file
  • better explanation of inconsistencies

Refusal reason vs solution

Refusal issue Practical legal fix
Wrong visa category Reassess whether STR, TWP, or business visa is correct
Weak employer letter Redraft with full job and quota details
Missing document Submit complete set next time
Name/date inconsistency Add explanation and legal proof
Unclear purpose Use concise cover letter and aligned evidence
Passport issue Renew passport and update file

31. Arrival in Nigeria: what happens next?

At immigration control

Present your:

  • passport with STR visa
  • supporting employment documents if asked

After entry

The critical next step is regularization.

This typically involves the employer coordinating with the Nigeria Immigration Service for:

  • regularization of stay
  • CERPAC application/issuance
  • lawful work-residence documentation

First 7–30 days

Exact timelines can vary, but workers should not delay. Ask the employer immediately:

  • when regularization filing will occur
  • what documents you must provide locally
  • when CERPAC capture/collection is expected

Other practical setup steps

Depending on your situation:

  • tax/payroll registration
  • local address setup
  • SIM card registration
  • bank account opening
  • employer onboarding

32. Real-world timeline examples

Example 1: Foreign engineer hired by Nigerian oil-services company

  • Week 1–3: Employer prepares quota/support package
  • Week 4: Applicant completes form and pays fee
  • Week 5: Submission/interview
  • Week 6–9: Visa processing
  • Week 10: STR issued
  • Week 11: Travel to Nigeria
  • Week 12 onward: Employer begins regularization/CERPAC steps

Example 2: University lecturer

  • Month 1: Appointment letter and institutional approvals
  • Month 2: STR filing at mission
  • Month 3: Approval and travel
  • Month 3–4: In-country regularization and residence documentation

Example 3: Dependent spouse joining later

  • Principal worker enters on STR and starts regularization
  • Dependent prepares marriage and identity documents
  • Dependent files under appropriate family/dependent process
  • Family reunites once approvals are complete

33. Ideal document pack structure

Best file order

  1. Passport bio page
  2. Visa form/confirmation
  3. Fee receipt
  4. Applicant cover letter
  5. Employment/appointment letter
  6. Employer support/request letter
  7. Expatriate quota approval documents
  8. Company registration documents
  9. CV
  10. Degree/professional certificates
  11. Bank/support documents if requested
  12. Extra explanations
  13. Civil documents for dependents if any

Naming convention

Use simple filenames such as:

  • 01_Passport_Biodata_FullName.pdf
  • 02_Visa_Form_FullName.pdf
  • 03_Employer_Support_Letter.pdf

Scan quality tips

  • color scans
  • upright pages
  • no cut corners
  • readable stamps/signatures
  • merge multi-page documents properly

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm STR is the correct category
  • Confirm employer has valid support basis
  • Passport valid
  • All names match
  • Photos ready
  • Employment documents complete
  • Quota documents included
  • Mission-specific checklist reviewed
  • Fee source confirmed on official site

Submission-day checklist

  • Passport original
  • Application confirmation
  • Fee receipt
  • Full document pack
  • Originals and copies
  • Appointment confirmation
  • Correct photo specs

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Arrive early
  • Bring employer contact details
  • Know your role and company
  • Carry originals
  • Dress neatly
  • Answer consistently and briefly

Arrival checklist

  • Carry work support letters
  • Have Nigerian address/contact
  • Notify employer on arrival
  • Start regularization immediately
  • Keep copies of entry stamp and visa page

Extension/renewal checklist

  • Track CERPAC validity
  • Confirm employer/quota status
  • Update passport details
  • Prepare renewal documents early
  • Do not wait until expiry

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal reason carefully
  • Identify exact deficiency
  • Fix documents, not just wording
  • Verify category again
  • Reapply only when file is stronger

35. FAQs

1. Is the STR visa the main Nigerian work visa?

Yes, for many long-term foreign employees, it is the standard entry route before regularization.

2. Can I work immediately on arrival with STR?

You should follow employer and NIS regularization requirements promptly. The route is built around post-arrival regularization.

3. Is STR the same as CERPAC?

No. STR is the entry visa; CERPAC is the residence/work documentation obtained after regularization.

4. Do I need a job offer before applying?

Usually yes.

5. Can I apply for STR without employer sponsorship?

Normally no.

6. What is expatriate quota and why does it matter?

It is a core approval framework that allows Nigerian employers to fill approved expatriate positions.

7. Can I use a business visa and start work while waiting?

Do not assume that is allowed.

8. Is STR for short-term contract work?

Not usually. TWP may be more suitable for short-term assignments.

9. Can my spouse come with me?

Possibly, but your spouse will usually need separate appropriate immigration processing.

10. Can my spouse work in Nigeria as my dependent?

Not automatically. Check the dependent’s own status rights.

11. Can children attend school in Nigeria?

Usually possible with proper dependent/legal stay arrangements, but verify local schooling and immigration requirements.

12. How long does STR processing take?

It varies by mission and case quality. There is no single reliable global timeline.

13. Are interviews always required?

No, not always.

14. Can I apply from a country where I am just visiting?

Some missions may refuse non-residents. Verify first.

15. Do I need police clearance?

Sometimes, depending on mission or case specifics.

16. Do I need medical tests?

Possibly, depending on current requirements and process stage.

17. Can I change employer after arriving?

Not freely; new immigration steps are usually required.

18. Can I bring dependents later?

Yes, often this is how families plan it.

19. Can I study part-time on STR?

Only incidentally; STR is not a student route.

20. Is there a minimum salary requirement?

No single public universal threshold is clearly published for all STR cases, but the role and employer support must be credible.

21. What if my name differs across documents?

Provide a formal explanation and legal linkage documents.

22. Can previous visa refusals affect STR?

Yes, especially if undisclosed or related to credibility issues.

23. Can I renew STR from inside Nigeria?

The key in-country process is regularization/CERPAC rather than simply renewing the entry visa.

24. Does STR lead to permanent residency?

Not directly, but long-term lawful stay may help broader residence history.

25. Can I freelance on the side while holding STR-based status?

Do not assume this is allowed.

26. What happens if regularization is delayed?

You risk falling out of compliance. Push the employer to start immediately.

27. Can founders use STR?

Sometimes, if they are formally taking an approved expatriate role in a Nigerian company with proper support.

28. Is there an online e-visa version of STR?

Nigeria has online visa systems, but STR remains a formal employment-entry route requiring supporting documentation and mission processing steps.

29. Do ECOWAS nationals need STR?

It depends on their nationality and the exact activity. Regional rights may affect entry, but employment compliance can still require local steps.

30. Can I appeal an STR refusal?

A formal universal appeal route is not always clearly stated; often the practical option is a corrected reapplication.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to Nigeria visas, STR processing, immigration regularization, and residence/work compliance.

  • Nigeria Immigration Service visa portal: https://visa.immigration.gov.ng/
  • Nigeria Immigration Service main website: https://immigration.gov.ng/
  • Nigeria Immigration Service CERPAC information: https://immigration.gov.ng/service/combined-expatriate-residence-permit-and-aliens-card-cerpac/
  • Nigeria Immigration Service Expatriate Quota information: https://immigration.gov.ng/service/expatriate-quota/
  • Nigeria Immigration Service Regularization of Stay information: https://immigration.gov.ng/service/regularization-of-stay/
  • Federal Ministry of Interior: https://interior.gov.ng/
  • Nigeria High Commission, London visa information: https://nigeriahc.org.uk/visa-information/
  • Embassy of Nigeria, Washington DC visa services: https://nigeriahouse.com/consular/visa-services/
  • Embassy of Nigeria, Berlin: https://nigeriaembassygermany.org/visa/
  • Nigeria Immigration Act / legal framework access point via NIS or Ministry pages: https://immigration.gov.ng/

37. Final verdict

The Nigeria Subject to Regularization (STR) Visa is the right route for people who are genuinely moving to Nigeria for approved long-term employment.

Best for

  • foreign employees with a real Nigerian job offer
  • employers with proper expatriate quota support
  • professionals who will complete residence/work regularization after arrival

Biggest benefits

  • lawful employment entry
  • pathway to CERPAC and legal residence/work status
  • suitable for long-term assignments, not just short visits

Biggest risks

  • using the wrong visa category
  • weak employer documentation
  • misunderstanding the need for post-arrival regularization
  • assuming the visa alone is the full work permit

Top preparation advice

  • verify that STR, not TWP or business visa, is correct
  • get a clean employer support package
  • make every document consistent
  • plan for CERPAC/regularization from day one
  • check mission-specific requirements before filing

When to consider another visa

Choose another route if your trip is for:

  • tourism
  • business meetings only
  • short-term technical assignment
  • study
  • job searching without an offer

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Exact current STR fee for your nationality and country of application
  • Whether your Nigerian mission requires biometrics, interview, or both
  • Whether your mission accepts applications from non-residents/third-country applicants
  • Current document checklist used by your specific embassy/high commission
  • Whether police clearance is required for your nationality or job type
  • Whether medical documentation is required pre-visa or only later in-country
  • Exact single-entry vs multiple-entry terms on the issued STR
  • Current regularization/CERPAC timeline and fees after arrival
  • Whether dependents should apply simultaneously or after the principal worker’s arrival
  • Any ECOWAS-specific exceptions affecting your case
  • Any recent updates to expatriate quota policy, Ministry of Interior rules, or NIS implementation practice

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