The Palms at a glance
The Palms Shopping Mall in Lekki Phase 1 is Lagos's pioneer modern shopping mall and the template for the wave of A-grade retail that followed it through the 2010s. Opened in 2005 by South African developer Persianas Group, The Palms was the first mall in Lagos to combine a major Western-style supermarket (Shoprite), a hypermarket (Game), a multiplex cinema (Silverbird), international fast-food anchors (KFC), and an integrated food court under a single covered roof. For a full generation of Lagosians it has been the default weekend retail destination of the Island.
Roughly 22,000 square metres of leasable space, anchored on Shoprite and Game, with around 90 smaller tenants — fashion, electronics, banking, casual dining, services. Still busy, still the default landmark for Lekki Phase 1.
The 2005 opening — Lagos's first A-grade mall
Before The Palms, Lagos retail was either small-format formal stores in commercial buildings, large open markets, or the limited supermarket sector dominated by smaller chains. The Palms's 2005 opening was a deliberate transplant of the South African mall format — a single building with controlled climate, dedicated parking, anchor tenants signing long leases, and a food court designed to extend dwell time. The format succeeded beyond initial projections and was copied across Nigeria over the following decade — Ikeja City Mall, Lekki Mall, Novare Lekki, and others followed the same playbook.
The anchor stores — Shoprite, Game, Silverbird
The mall's three founding anchors remain in operation:
- Shoprite — the supermarket-format store carrying groceries, fresh produce, butchery, bakery, household goods, and a substantial selection of imported items. The most-visited single store in the mall.
- Game — Walmart-owned hypermarket carrying electronics, white goods, home furnishings, and bulk groceries at competitive pricing. (The Game brand has been progressively wound down in some African markets — check current status at the mall.)
- Silverbird Cinemas — multiplex showing current Hollywood releases, Nollywood premieres, and occasional Bollywood titles. Five screens.
The food court and casual dining
The food court anchors KFC (still the busiest individual outlet most days), Chicken Republic, Domino's Pizza, and a rotating selection of smaller Nigerian and international quick-service brands. Casual sit-down restaurants outside the food court include Spur (South African-style steakhouse), Crust & Cream (bakery café), and a coffee outlet. Pricing is mid-market — a casual meal runs ₦3,000–₦8,000 per person.
Other retail — fashion, electronics, services
Fashion tenants include Levi's, Mango, Nine West, the LC Waikiki Turkish-format store, and a substantial selection of Nigerian boutiques. Electronics retailers carry mid-range phones, laptops, and accessories. Service tenants include several banks (UBA, GTBank, Zenith, Access), a post office, a dry cleaner, optician, pharmacy, salon, and a small selection of professional offices. A children's play area and a kiddie ride zone occupy the upper floor.
Opening hours and parking
The mall opens daily from 9:00 AM to 9:00 PM (some restaurants and the cinema extend later). Weekend afternoons — particularly Saturday — are busiest; weekday mornings are quiet. Parking is in a multi-storey adjacent structure and an on-grade lot, totalling around 1,200 spaces. Parking is paid on entry/exit. Security inspects vehicles at the entrance and bag checks apply at the mall doors.
How to get there
The Palms is on Bisway Street, off Admiralty Way, Lekki Phase 1 — just inside the first Lekki toll gate. From Victoria Island: 15-25 minutes off-peak via Ozumba Mbadiwe. From Ikoyi via the Lekki-Ikoyi Link Bridge: 10-15 minutes. From Ikeja: 60-90 minutes off-peak. From central Lekki / Chevron: 5-10 minutes. The mall is a standard ride-hail destination — drivers know it well. Use the trip planner for the most reliable route.
Practical tips
- Avoid Saturday afternoons if you want a calm shopping experience. Sunday morning is the sweet spot.
- The exit lane on Sunday evenings queues — leave by 6 PM or stay until 8:30 PM to skip the worst.
- Most stores accept cards; bring some cash for smaller market-style stalls and parking change.
- Free Wi-Fi is patchy — most stores rely on mobile data.
- The Silverbird cinema sells tickets in advance through their app; weekend evening shows often sell out for first-week Hollywood releases.
- Combine with the Lekki Market nearby for a half-day Lekki Phase 1 errand-running run.
Wider travel context
The Palms Shopping Mall is best understood not as a standalone destination but as one node within the wider Lekki Phase 1 fabric of Eti-Osa, Lagos. Visits to landmark sites in this part of the country reward the traveller who pairs the headline attraction with the surrounding daily life — the markets, the streets, the small restaurants, the religious centres, the public transport hubs that together make up the district. A first-visit traveller will often find that the most memorable parts of the day are the off-script encounters in the surrounding streets rather than the landmark itself.
Nearby points indexed on Locate.ng that pair well with a visit to The Palms Shopping Mall: Ceracerni ArtHub, Lekki Arts & Crafts Market, Lekki–Ikoyi Link Bridge, Nike Art Gallery. Each of these has its own profile page with directions, photographs, and the practical context for a visit. Combining two or three in a single day produces a more substantial experience than focusing on a single stop.
For commuters and longer-stay visitors, the surrounding Lekki Phase 1 area also functions as a working neighbourhood with the full Nigerian urban rhythm — markets, schools, religious services, public transport, residential blocks. The articles for the parent Lekki Phase 1 district, the Eti-Osa LGA, and Lagos State together describe the broader context in which The Palms Shopping Mall operates. For step-by-step transport options, the trip planner handles BRT, ride-hail, and informal-mode routing from your origin.