Introduction to Taraba State
Taraba State is one of the 36 states of Nigeria, part of the North East geopolitical zone, with its capital at Jalingo. The state covers a sizeable land area and is home to roughly 3.1 million people, organised across 16 Local Government Areas. It blends urban centres with extensive rural and agricultural areas, a balance that shapes both its economy and its politics.
This guide brings together Taraba's government, demographics, geography, economy, education, transport, culture, and the practical detail people search for when planning travel, business, schooling, or relocation. Wherever a deeper page exists on Locate.ng — for an individual Local Government Area, university, market, or transit corridor — we link directly to it so you can keep going.
Government & administration
The state government is led by an executive Governor and Deputy Governor, supported by a Commissioner-led cabinet. The State House of Assembly serves as the legislative arm. Together they coordinate education, health, urban planning, transport, internal security, and other devolved responsibilities.
Administratively, Taraba is divided into 16 Local Government Areas, each headed by an elected Local Government Chairman. Each LGA is further broken down into wards, districts, towns, and neighbourhoods. A complete breakdown of the LGAs is in the section below.
Federal and state civic institutions include the State Government Secretariat, INEC offices, NIPOST branches, immigration offices and police divisions. As the directory grows, each is indexed individually on Locate.ng with addresses, hours, fees and contacts.
Geography & climate
Taraba sits in the dry north-eastern reaches of Nigeria, bordering the Lake Chad basin. It shares borders with Adamawa, Bauchi, Benue, Gombe, Nasarawa, Plateau, which together shape both inter-state trade flows and seasonal weather patterns.
The climate is largely Sudan-savanna with a single rainy season between roughly May and September, peaking in August. The dry season is long, hot in the daytime, and noticeably cooler at night, with harmattan winds from December through February sometimes bringing dust-haze that grounds flights. Annual rainfall averages around 700–1,200 mm. Vegetation is predominantly short grass and acacia, with cultivated farmland on a wide scale.
The terrain is a mix of open plains, scattered inselbergs, and seasonal river beds. Major rivers and natural features shape settlement and transport: where rivers meet roads, cities and markets tend to follow. Locate.ng's areas index for Taraba provides 1 indexed districts within the LGAs, each with its own neighbourhoods, streets, and points of interest.
Demographics & people
The population of Taraba is estimated at 3,066,800 people, with a density that varies widely between urban centres and rural LGAs. A meaningful share of the population still lives in semi-rural and farming communities, with periodic markets and seasonal labour flows tying smaller settlements to the urban core. The state continues to draw in-migrants from neighbouring states.
Ethnic and linguistic composition reflects the wider regional pattern. The dominant groups in Taraba include Fulani, Mumuye, Tiv, Jukun, with smaller communities from elsewhere in the federation living alongside them. Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Pidgin, and English are all commonly heard in markets and on public transport.
Religion in Taraba is predominantly Muslim, with Christian minorities concentrated in particular districts and a smaller traditional-religion presence in some rural areas. Major festivals from both traditions are observed publicly and are reflected on the Taraba events calendar.
Economy & commerce
Taraba has a diversified economy whose precise GDP estimate has shifted with each recent rebasing exercise.
Agriculture is the dominant economic activity, with major outputs including grains, livestock, groundnuts, and tubers depending on the climate zone. Trade and transport — particularly long-haul road freight serving northern markets and cross-border routes — make up the second pillar, alongside textile manufacturing in some of the larger urban centres.
For job seekers, Taraba is one of the more active markets in Nigeria — particularly for graduates and skilled workers — with active listings on the Locate.ng jobs board covering tech, finance, operations, healthcare, education, and trades.
Education
Taraba hosts a network of primary, secondary, and tertiary institutions, including state-owned universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education. As individual institutions are catalogued they appear in the universities directory — each with admission requirements, fees, faculties, and JAMB cutoffs.
Transport & getting around
Getting around Taraba mixes private, commercial, and public transport. Inter-city movement happens mostly on roads, with motor parks serving as the main inter-state departure points.
Within the state, intra-city movement relies on a mix of BRT, mini-buses ("Danfo"), tricycles ("Keke NAPEP"), and motorbikes, depending on the LGA. As the commute graph fills in, Locate.ng will surface step-by-step routes with modes, fares, and operators. Plan any trip with the Locate.ng trip planner.
Local Government Areas
Taraba is divided into 16 Local Government Areas, each with its own administrative council, headquarters, and clusters of districts. The full list with browse-able profile pages is in the LGAs section above.
Culture, heritage & food
Cultural life in Taraba reflects the state's history, ethnic mix, and religious traditions. Annual festivals — both religious and traditional — are central to the cultural calendar, alongside a year-round programme of music, art, and food events that pull in attendees from across the federation.
Cuisine in Taraba draws on the wider regional tradition — grilled suya, tuwo, miyan kuka, kilishi, and a daily presence of grilled fish and beef. Street food, bukkas, and full-service restaurants thrive side by side — for a current snapshot of what's open, see the restaurants directory for Taraba.
Practical guide for visitors & residents
Postal codes & addresses. Postal codes in Taraba use the 660xx range — full breakdown by area and LGA is on the Taraba postal codes page. For a specific area, search by name in the national postal codes directory.
Safety & travel. Safety and security vary by district and time of day; daytime travel along main corridors is generally routine, while late-night travel through unfamiliar areas should be planned with care. Public transport hubs are heavily policed but also dense, so carry valuables close. For up-to-date area-by-area context, consult the latest Locate.ng guides.
Cost of living. Costs in Taraba sit around or below the national average — particularly outside the largest cities . Average daily transit fares, market food costs, and rent ranges differ sharply by LGA; the area-level pages on Locate.ng break each down individually.
NYSC. Taraba hosts at least one NYSC Orientation Camp and a State Secretariat — addresses and what-to-pack lists are on the NYSC pages.