About Idimu
Idimu is a district in Alimosho LGA, Lagos State. It blends residential streets, local commerce, and the daily commuter flows that keep Alimosho moving. Postal code: 100268.
This guide walks through what's in Idimu — the streets, estates, bus stops, markets, and landmarks indexed within the area — alongside the transport options, ratings, and practical context for visitors and residents.
Character and rhythm of Idimu
Idimu sits within the broader fabric of Alimosho, with its own character shaped by the people who live there, the daily commuter flows that pass through, and the businesses, schools, and places of worship that anchor the area's social life. Like most Nigerian urban districts, Idimu has grown organically over time — original residential plots have been subdivided, new housing has filled in around the older buildings, and small commerce has crept along the main roads as the population has thickened.
The mood of the area changes through the day. Mornings are dominated by school drop-offs and the start of commercial traffic; mid-day brings a slower rhythm in the residential streets and a denser one in the commercial corridors; evenings restore the residential energy as commuters return. Weekends shift the balance: Saturdays bring social events that occupy the streets, while Sundays start quietly with religious services and then build through the afternoon as families visit, shop, and relax. Long-term residents talk about the area in terms of these rhythms more than any single landmark.
Places and points of interest
Idimu contains 15 indexed points of interest. Highlights by type:
Buildings
- Afro-American Wealth Oil and Gaz
- Ajiboye Clinic And Maternity Home
- Al-Moruf Oil
- Alimosho Local Goverment Egbe Idimu Lcda Health Center
- Carelife Medical Centre
- Fellowship Hospital
Mosques
- Idimu Central Mosque
Roads
- Idimu-Ikotun Road
- Lasu-Isheri Road
Transport and getting around
Getting around Idimu is straightforward: Danfo mini-buses on the main roads, Keke NAPEP tricycles into the inner streets, motorbikes for the tightest corners, and ride-hail apps door-to-door. Plan trips to or from anywhere in Idimu with the trip planner.
Shopping and daily needs
Daily shopping in Idimu covers groceries, household goods, electronics, and services through a mix of roadside stalls, mini-marts, and neighbourhood markets. For larger shopping trips, the nearest indexed markets in Lagos are typically a short ride away.
Services, schools, and utilities
Public and private services in Idimu follow the wider Alimosho pattern. Basic healthcare is provided by a mix of LGA primary health centres, private clinics, and pharmacies — most routine consultations and prescriptions can be handled locally without travelling outside the area. More specialist care typically requires a short journey to the nearest secondary or teaching hospital.
Education in the area runs from public and private primary and secondary schools through to vocational and faith-based education centres. Faith institutions are a major part of the social fabric, with churches and mosques active across the area and often hosting community events that extend well beyond Sundays and Fridays. Utilities — electricity, water, refuse collection, network coverage — broadly track the wider Lagos pattern, with most households running backup arrangements for the inevitable power gaps.
Housing and the property market
Housing in Idimu mixes formal and informal stock typical of mid-density Nigerian urban districts. Older streets carry single-storey detached and semi-detached houses on original residential plots; newer infill has added two- and three-storey buildings, gated mini-estates, and the occasional taller apartment block. Rents and purchase prices vary sharply by street — proximity to the main road, gated security, and parking availability all push prices noticeably higher than equivalent space on the inner streets. Rental markets in Idimu run on the standard Nigerian two-year-upfront model for most flats, with shorter terms increasingly available for serviced and shortlet apartments. Major agents and word-of-mouth referrals remain the primary discovery channel; online listings have grown but rarely cover the full inventory.
For buyers, the area's land documentation history matters. Properties with proper Certificates of Occupancy or Governor's Consent carry meaningful price premiums over those with weaker documentation. Engaging a local property lawyer for any purchase is strongly recommended. For renters, a clear-written tenancy agreement is the basic protection; many disputes in Nigerian rental markets trace back to ambiguities in the original term sheet.
Food, restaurants, and groceries
Food in Idimu reflects the wider Lagos culinary tradition. Bukkas (informal local-food canteens) operate at lunchtime serving rice and stew, jollof, amala, eba, semolina, soups and proteins; suya stands light up the main roads from late afternoon; small fast-food chains and mini-restaurants serve a wider range during the day, with evenings bringing the busiest retail traffic. Cold-store fast-food chains like Chicken Republic, Mr. Bigg's, and the larger regional brands have a growing presence; locally-owned restaurants fill in the rest of the spectrum.
For groceries, the area is served by a mix of mini-marts, the nearest open market, and small chain supermarkets where present. The neighbourhood phone-and-airtime retailers, hair salons, tailoring kiosks, laundry services, and small-engineering repair shops fill in the daily services that round out an urban district's economy.
Practical information
Postal code & addresses. Postal code: 100268.
Nearby districts. Aboru, Abule Egba, Aguda Ogba, Akowonjo, Alimosho.