Top 10 Profitable Small Scale Businesses to Start in Nigeria
With rising unemployment and inflation, many Nigerians are turning to small-scale businesses to generate income. The good news? You don’t need millions to start — with creativity and consistency, you can build a profitable business with modest capital.
Here are the Top 10 profitable small-scale businesses you can start in Nigeria in 2025.
1. POS Business (Agent Banking)
One of the fastest-growing businesses in Nigeria.
Provide cash withdrawals, deposits, and transfers using POS terminals.
Requires a small space, POS machine (from banks or fintechs), and float money. 💡 Startup capital: ₦100,000–₦300,000.
2. Food Vendor / Restaurant (Mama Put & Online Orders)
Food will always sell in Nigeria.
You can start small by selling cooked food, snacks, or lunch packs.
Apps like Bolt Food, Glovo, Chowdeck now allow small vendors to reach more customers. 💡 Startup capital: ₦50,000–₦300,000 (depending on scale).
3. Mini Importation Business
Import goods from China, Turkey, or Dubai at low prices and sell online.
Hot items: fashion items, phone accessories, wigs, cosmetics.
Platforms like 1688.com and Alibaba make sourcing easy. 💡 Startup capital: ₦100,000–₦500,000.
4. Barbing or Hair Salon
Hair care is a daily need for men and women.
A small barbing salon or hair-braiding shop in a busy area brings steady income.
You can also offer home services. 💡 Startup capital: ₦150,000–₦400,000.
5. Laundry & Dry Cleaning Services
Many urban Nigerians don’t have time to wash clothes.
Start with basic washing machines, pressing irons, and delivery services.
Home pickup & delivery can set you apart. 💡 Startup capital: ₦200,000–₦500,000.
6. Poultry Farming (Small Scale)
Egg and chicken demand is constant.
You can start with a small pen and a few layers or broilers.
Scales easily into large agribusiness. 💡 Startup capital: ₦100,000–₦500,000.
7. Phone & Laptop Accessories Sales
Nigerians are heavy phone users — accessories like chargers, earpieces, power banks, and cases sell daily.
You can combine with phone repair services. 💡 Startup capital: ₦50,000–₦200,000.
8. Bakery & Snacks Production
Bread, meat pies, doughnuts, chin-chin, and pastries have a wide market.
Small ovens and baking tools are enough to start from home. 💡 Startup capital: ₦80,000–₦300,000.
9. Car Wash Business
With Nigeria’s dusty roads, car washes are always in demand.
Needs land space, water supply, and basic equipment.
Can be combined with a barbershop or lounge. 💡 Startup capital: ₦200,000–₦500,000.
10. Recharge Card & Data Sales (VTU Business)
With Nigeria’s mobile-first economy, airtime and data sell every day.
Use VTU apps and portals to resell airtime, data, and utility payments.
Can be combined with POS or phone accessories. 💡 Startup capital: ₦20,000–₦100,000.
✅ Final Thoughts
Starting a small-scale business in Nigeria doesn’t always require huge money — it requires consistency, good customer service, and location strategy.
The most profitable small-scale businesses are those that solve everyday Nigerian problems — food, money transfers, energy, grooming, and connectivity.