About Ifako-Ijaiye LGA
Ifako-Ijaiye Local Government Area is one of 20 LGAs in Lagos State, with its administrative headquarters at Ifako. With an estimated population of 875,436, it ranks among the more populous LGAs in Lagos, characterised by a dense urban fabric and an active commercial corridor.
This guide walks through what makes Ifako-Ijaiye LGA distinctive — its government, geography, demographics, economy, transport, and the indexed districts within it. Each section links out to the deeper pages on Locate.ng for individual areas, markets, landmarks, and institutions that sit inside the LGA boundary.
Government and administration
Ifako-Ijaiye LGA is administered by an elected Local Government Chairman supported by a Vice Chairman and councillors representing each of the LGA's electoral wards. The Council Secretariat handles day-to-day administration — refuse collection, primary education, primary healthcare, market regulation, motor-park licensing, and street-level civic services. Major decisions on transport, education, urban planning, and security are coordinated with the Lagos State government.
Federal and state institutional presences in the LGA include INEC, NIPOST, immigration, NIMC NIN-registration, and police divisions. These are added to Locate.ng's institutions directory as each is verified individually.
Geography and physical character
Ifako-Ijaiye LGA sits within Lagos State, on the Lagos Mainland, with a mix of high-density residential districts, commercial corridors, and industrial pockets. Most of the LGA sits between 5 and 30 metres above sea level, with very few natural rises. Heavy rainfall combined with this low elevation makes storm-water drainage a perennial planning issue, particularly during the peak of the rains in June and July.
The climate follows the wider Lagos pattern: a wet season that brings most of the year's rainfall and shapes the agricultural calendar, and a dry season that compresses outdoor activity into the cooler morning and late-afternoon hours. Daily temperatures stay warm year-round, with the harmattan haze in December–February affecting the LGA to a degree that depends on how far north it sits within the country. Locals adjust by timing markets and major outdoor events to the cooler shoulder hours.
Geographically, Ifako-Ijaiye LGA is centred approximately at 6.6770° N, 3.3340° E. The administrative footprint covers 10 indexed districts on Locate.ng, each with its own neighbourhoods, streets, and points of interest. Roads, drainage channels, and utility corridors follow the natural contours; where they cross natural features or boundaries, smaller markets and bus stops have grown up over time.
Demographics
Ifako-Ijaiye LGA has a population of around 875,436 according to the most recent published estimates. Density varies sharply by district — the urban core packs many thousands of people per km², while the outer districts are markedly less dense and in some cases still semi-rural. Daily population swells above the residential count because of in-bound commuter flows for work, school, and market trade. Buses, mini-buses, and motorbikes empty out at the major junctions every morning and fill again in the evening, generating the distinctive rush-hour pattern that shapes both road planning and public-transport scheduling.
Ethnic and linguistic composition reflects the wider Lagos pattern, with the indigenous population layered with established communities from across the federation. The Yoruba indigenous majority shares the LGA with very large Igbo, Hausa, Edo, Ijaw, and West-African migrant communities, plus a wide spread of Nigerian and international expatriate residents in the more commercial districts. Pidgin, English, and Yoruba are all heard daily on buses, in markets, and across public services.
Age structure skews young, in line with the national pattern: the median age in Ifako-Ijaiye LGA sits well below the global median, and the school-age and early-working-age cohorts form the bulk of the daily population. Household structures range from extended-family compounds in the older districts to nuclear-family apartments in the newer estates and high-rise blocks. The LGA's social calendar tracks the traditional and religious holiday cycle of the wider state, with weddings, naming ceremonies, and religious observances anchoring much of the weekend traffic and crowd flows.
Daily life and rhythm of the LGA
Everyday life in Ifako-Ijaiye LGA follows a recognisable Nigerian urban rhythm. Mornings start early — by 6:00 AM the main roads are busy with commuters, schoolchildren, and traders heading to the markets to set up. The middle of the day brings the densest activity in the commercial corridors and around the institutional cluster near the headquarters. Late afternoons see the reverse commuter flow, with the heaviest traffic typically between 4:00 PM and 8:00 PM on weekdays. Evenings settle into a quieter rhythm in the residential districts, while commercial centres stay active well past dark.
Weekends shift the pattern. Saturdays are dominated by social events — weddings, naming ceremonies, parties — that pull people across the LGA and frequently spill onto the streets. Sundays are quieter in the morning, with churches and mosques drawing congregations, then more relaxed in the afternoon as families visit, shop, and gather. Public-transport demand patterns shift accordingly: routes to the major event venues and religious centres get noticeably busier than the typical weekday flow.
Service delivery — electricity, water, refuse collection, road maintenance — is a mix of state-level utilities, federal infrastructure, and LGA-level interventions. Power supply is intermittent and most households and businesses run backup generators or invertor systems. Water supply is similarly hybrid: piped where the network reaches, with borehole-and-tank arrangements widely used to fill the gaps. Mobile network coverage is generally strong across the LGA, with all major Nigerian telcos active.
Districts and areas
Ifako-Ijaiye contains 10 indexed districts/areas on Locate.ng, with 34 points of interest (streets, estates, bus stops, landmarks and more) catalogued within them. Each district has its own page with neighbourhood character, postal codes, transit links, and nearby places.
Indexed districts
Economy and commerce
Commercial activity in Ifako-Ijaiye covers retail, services, and informal trade across the LGA, with periodic markets, shopping clusters, and roadside trade serving daily needs. Browse the directory at /businesses.
Education and healthcare
Ifako-Ijaiye LGA is served by a layered network of educational institutions, from public and private primary and secondary schools through to tertiary institutions where the LGA hosts a campus or affiliated facility. Tertiary institutions are typically reached from Ifako-Ijaiye by a short commute to the major university hubs of Lagos — see the universities directory for the current set. Public primary and secondary schools follow the Lagos state curriculum, with private schools — both faith-based and secular — adding choice across the LGA.
Healthcare in the LGA is delivered through a mix of LGA-run primary health centres, state-government secondary hospitals, federal teaching hospitals where the LGA is close to one, and a growing private-clinic and pharmacy network. Primary care, immunisation, antenatal services, and routine outpatient consultations are handled at the closer-to-home centres; specialist care is referred up to the state or federal teaching hospitals. Pharmacy density has grown steadily over the last decade, with chain pharmacies now present in most urban districts alongside the longer-established independent operators. Emergency services include LASEMA-style state agencies (or their equivalent), the Federal Road Safety Corps for highway incidents, and a dense network of police divisions.
Transport
Movement within Ifako-Ijaiye relies on a mix of buses, mini-buses, tricycles (Keke), motorbikes, and private vehicles depending on the district. 4 transit stops within the LGA are indexed on Locate.ng — search the bus stops directory for the full list. Plan any trip to or from Ifako-Ijaiye with the commute planner, which returns step-by-step BRT/Danfo/Keke directions, fare ranges, and operators.
Practical information
Postal codes & addresses. Postal codes in Ifako-Ijaiye are within the 102xx range. The complete area-by-area breakdown is on the Lagos postal codes page.
Other LGAs in Lagos. If you are exploring more of the state, see Agege, Ajeromi-Ifelodun, Alimosho, Amuwo-Odofin and the full LGAs list.