How to get from Ikoyi to University of Lagos
This is a complete guide to commuting between Ikoyi and University of Lagos in Nigeria by public transport. Expect to pay ₦1,550–₦2,100 per passenger, with the trip taking around 39 minutes over a road distance of 20 km. Modes available include Walking, FLM, Danfo, Korope, Campus Shuttle. Use the Locate.ng trip planner to confirm current options before leaving.
The guide walks through step-by-step directions, the fare breakdown by mode, expected travel time across the day, alternatives if one mode is unavailable, and practical tips that experienced commuters on this route swear by.
Step-by-step directions
The fastest current route from Ikoyi to University of Lagos runs as follows:
- Walking: Ikoyi → Barrow Bus Stop. Approximate duration: 5 minutes.
- FLM: Barrow Bus Stop → Obalende. Route: Barrow Bus Stop - Maja Bus Stop. Fare: ₦300–₦400. Approximate duration: 6 minutes.
- Danfo: Obalende → Empire Bus Stop. Route: Obalende - Oshodi Isale Bus Stop. Fare: ₦700–₦1,000. Approximate duration: 22 minutes.
- Walking: Empire Bus Stop → Jibowu Bus Stop. Route: Jibowu Bus Stop - Empire Bus Stop. Approximate duration: 3 minutes.
- Korope: Jibowu Bus Stop → Unilag Gate. Route: Jibowu Bus Stop - Unilag Gate. Fare: ₦250–₦300. Approximate duration: 6 minutes.
- Campus Shuttle: Unilag Gate → Sport Centre. Route: Unilag Gate - Moremi Cab Park. Fare: ₦300–₦400. Approximate duration: 1 minutes.
- Walking: Sport Centre → University of Lagos. Approximate duration: 5 minutes.
Modes available on this corridor
The Ikoyi → University of Lagos corridor sits within Nigeria's wider public-transport network, which combines formal BRT lanes, dense informal mini-bus and tricycle routes, motorbike services, and — in Lagos — limited rail and ferry services. The choice of mode on this corridor depends on three things: the time of day, the budget you're willing to spend, and the route segments you're willing to walk.
BRT and dedicated bus lanes are the fastest and most predictable option where they exist on the corridor — fares are fixed (typically by the Cowry card on LAMATA routes), arrival intervals are reasonable, and the rides are air-conditioned on most routes. Demand spikes during peak hours can push queue times above 15 minutes at major terminals. Danfo mini-buses are the workhorse — frequent, cheap, and almost universally available, but slower in traffic and pricing is negotiated at boarding. Keke NAPEP tricycles fill the gaps where mini-buses don't go, particularly in inner-residential districts. Okada (motorbikes) and ride-hail (Bolt, Uber, inDrive) are the door-to-door options when time matters more than budget. Each mode has its own etiquette and fare expectations.
Fare breakdown
Expected total fare for this trip is between ₦1,550 and ₦2,100 per passenger. Fares fluctuate with fuel price changes, time of day (rush-hour pricing on Danfo and Keke), weather (rain adds a premium on most informal modes), and route demand. BRT fares are set by LAMATA and remain the most predictable; Danfo and Keke fares are negotiated at the stop. Carry small denominations (₦100, ₦200, ₦500 notes) to speed up boarding and avoid change problems.
Travel time across the day
The journey takes around 39 minutes off-peak. Peak-hour traffic (7:00–10:00 AM and 4:00–8:00 PM on weekdays) can push the duration to ~70 minutes or more, particularly during the rainy season. Weekend mornings before 10:00 AM are typically the fastest window of the week.
Weather, season, and how they affect the trip
Weather is the single most predictable variable that shifts the time, cost, and comfort of the Ikoyi to University of Lagos trip. During the dry season (November through March), expect the published time and fare ranges to hold. During the wet season, particularly the peak rains in June through September, both rise: fares climb because demand for shelter and faster modes spikes; times stretch because flooding in low-lying segments adds detours and slows traffic. Heavy rain shifts almost every mode at once — Danfo and Keke pricing rises noticeably, BRT queues lengthen, motorbike services often refuse boarding for safety reasons. Walking links between stops become slower and riskier. The simplest defence is to time the trip around the worst of the downpour, carry a small umbrella, and have a 30–50% time buffer in your schedule for any trip planned during the wet months.
Alternatives if your first choice is unavailable
If the primary mode is unavailable or congested, the typical alternatives on this corridor are: a Danfo mini-bus on the same surface route (slower but more frequent), a ride-hail (Bolt, Uber, inDrive) which costs several multiples of the public-transit fare but bypasses the wait, or a longer multi-leg public-transit option via an intermediate hub. The trip planner lets you toggle strategies (fastest, cheapest, most comfortable) to compare the trade-offs.
Safety along the corridor
Safety on the Ikoyi → University of Lagos corridor follows the wider Nigerian urban-transit pattern. Daytime travel along the main corridors is routine, with both formal and informal modes operating under regular police and traffic-marshal attention. After dark, exercise more care, particularly at unfamiliar interchanges or in less-policed segments. Keep valuables close on crowded mini-buses, avoid displaying expensive phones or jewellery at busy stops, and use registered ride-hail apps for late-night legs where possible. Verify the driver's identity and registration before boarding any ride-hail trip. Carry small notes for fare payment so you don't have to display larger amounts; this speeds up boarding and reduces the visible cash you're carrying.
Practical tips
A few corridor-specific tips:
- Time it. Aim to leave just before peak hour starts or just after it ends — the difference between leaving at 6:30 AM versus 7:30 AM can be 30+ minutes.
- Confirm fares at boarding. Ask the conductor ("Driver, how much?") before sitting down. This avoids the awkward mid-trip negotiation.
- Mind your stop. Common stop names get reused across routes. Confirm the specific landmark or junction at boarding.
- Carry a card AND cash. BRT accepts the Cowry card on dedicated routes; Danfo and Keke remain cash-only.
- Plan for weather. Heavy rain shifts almost all modes — pricing rises, frequency drops, and walking links become trickier.