Naija7Wonders Conference counts gains, challenges of Nigeria’s Detty December 2025

File: Detty-December

As Nigeria positions Detty December as a global festive attraction, industry experts have stressed the need for improved service standards, price transparency and infrastructure readiness to ensure that the phenomenon continues to deliver long-term benefits rather than short-term gains.
  
This call was made at the just concluded Naija7Wonders 3.0 Conference, a digital tourism advocacy forum curated by the organiser of Akwaaba Travel Market, Ambassador Ikechi Uko, as part of preparations for the 2026 Detty December Festival. The zoom conference brought together industry stakeholders to assess the opportunities, lessons and challenges associated with the festive-season travel boom that has come to define Nigeria’s tourism calendar.
  
With preparations already underway for Detty December 2026, stakeholders emphasised that lessons from recent seasons must now translate into actionable strategies that strengthen Nigeria’s place on the global tourism map.
  
Stakeholders at the forum agreed that while Nigeria’s Detty December has evolved from a spontaneous end-of-year party culture into one of Africa’s most powerful tourism and cultural movements whilst unlocking enormous economic and cultural value, sustaining its success will require better planning, coordination and regulation across the tourism value chain.
  
Speaking at the conference, Founder Mardis Travels & Tours, Cordis Umeokoli, shared practical insights from her company’s experience hosting 30 students from Stanford University in America during the 2025 Detty December season. According to her, the students were taken on a curated cultural and leisure tour that showcased Nigeria’s rich heritage and urban lifestyle. Destinations visited included Olumo Rock in Abeokuta, local arts and crafts markets and several beaches in Lagos.

The group also experienced a train ride around Lagos, participated in traditional tie-and-dye activities and visited a local brewery that transforms into a lounge at night, offering a blend of culture, creativity and nightlife. Cordis noted that the experience reinforced Detty December’s growing appeal to international visitors seeking authentic cultural immersion beyond concerts and nightlife.
  
However, she acknowledged that the tour also revealed key gaps in Nigeria’s tourism readiness. One major challenge, she said, was accommodation. “Some of the hotels we used were not fully prepared because they were undergoing renovations,” she explained. “Such projects should be completed well ahead of December, given how critical that period has become for tourism.”
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Cordis also disclosed that hotel pricing is another pressing issue. She revealed that some hotels charged rates far above their usual prices without prior notice, creating budgeting challenges for tour operators and visitors alike. She called for the establishment of a regulatory or monitoring framework to check arbitrary price hikes during peak seasons, warning that unchecked pricing could undermine Nigeria’s competitiveness as a festive tourism destination.
 

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