Lagos: The Chaotic, Brilliant Megacity That Never Sleeps
Lagos hit me like a wall of sound, heat, and energy the second I stepped outside Murtala Muhammed airport. Fifteen million people sharing a sprawling coastal city built on lagoons, and every single one of them seems to be going somewhere at full speed. This is not a city for the faint-hearted. It is a city for the curious.
Lagos Island vs the Mainland
Lagos splits neatly into two personalities. Lagos Island is the old heart — colonial-era buildings, the chaotic energy of Balogun Market, and the crumbling grandeur of Brazilian-style architecture from the 19th century. The Mainland stretches endlessly: Ikeja, Surulere, Yaba — neighbourhoods with their own rhythms and street food ecosystems. And then there's Lekki and Victoria Island, the modern side — glass towers, beach clubs, and restaurants that could be in London or Dubai.
The Street Food
Forget the hotel restaurant. Lagos street food is extraordinary and absurdly cheap. Suya — spiced, grilled beef skewers — is the king. Find a suya spot after dark (they all fire up at dusk), order a newspaper-wrapped portion with sliced onions and tomatoes, and eat it standing up. Jollof rice from a roadside buka costs ₦500 ($0.60) and will fill you completely. Puff-puff (fried dough balls) for ₦200 from a morning vendor is the correct breakfast.
Afrobeats at the Source
You haven't heard Afrobeats until you've heard it in Lagos. The New Afrika Shrine in Ikeja — built by Fela Kuti's son Femi — hosts live music every weekend. The energy is indescribable: a packed open-air venue, Afrobeat bands playing three-hour sets, people dancing like nobody's watching (because nobody is — everyone's dancing). Cover charge is ₦2,000 ($2.50). Drinks are cheap. Go on a Sunday night.
Getting Around
Traffic in Lagos is legendary. Locals call it "go-slow" and it can turn a 10km journey into a two-hour ordeal. Use Bolt or Uber — they're cheap and metered. For an authentic experience, take a danfo (yellow minibus) but know your route first. The BRT bus lane from the mainland to the island is the fastest public transit option and costs ₦500.
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Tips & Advice
- Traffic ("go-slow") is legendary. Plan your day around it — avoid Third Mainland Bridge at rush hour.
- Use Bolt or Uber rather than yellow taxis. Safer and metered.
- Carry cash in small denominations. Card payments are unreliable outside malls and hotels.
- Street food (suya, jollof rice, puff-puff) is excellent and cheap — follow the crowds to the busiest stalls.
Recommendations (3)
Nike Art Gallery, Lekki
attractionFour-storey gallery showcasing thousands of Nigerian artworks. Free entry. One of the largest private galleries in West Africa.
New Afrika Shrine
barFela Kuti's legacy lives here. Live Afrobeat every weekend. Go Sunday night. Cover is ₦2,000.
Freedom Park, Lagos Island
parkFormer colonial prison turned arts and culture park. Live music on weekends. A peaceful oasis in the chaos.
About the contributor
Aisha Mbeki
@aishawanders
Travel writer & cultural anthropologist. Obsessed with local markets and hidden neighborhoods.