What is the cheapest way to send a parcel to Nigeria from India?
For documents and parcels under 5 kg, DTDC International Standard at ~₹1,850/500g (8–12 days) is the cheapest reliable option. For 5 kg+, India Post Speed Post or DHL eCommerce Economy at ₹8,200–₹14,500 (14–21 days) is the budget choice — but NCS clearance is slower in the economy lane. Walk-in counters are usually 20–35% more expensive than booking via an authorised partner like us.
Which courier is best for India to Nigeria?
DHL Express is strongly recommended — DHL has priority NCS clearance lanes at Lagos and Abuja which significantly cut customs time. FedEx International Priority is comparable. DTDC International wins on cost for non-urgent 8–12 day standard parcels. Aramex for premium document-only routes. We compare live rates across all four for every booking.
How much does DHL charge from India to Nigeria?
DHL Express from Udaipur to Nigeria is approximately ₹2,200 for a 500g document, ₹2,900 for 1 kg, ₹11,800 for 5 kg, and ₹21,500+ for 10 kg — all door-to-door, 6–9 business days, plus monthly fuel surcharge. Our negotiated rates are typically 5–10% below the DHL walk-in counter price.
How long does a courier from Udaipur to Nigeria take?
Express (DHL / FedEx) delivers in 6–9 business days to Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt. Standard service takes 8–12 days. Economy / Speed Post takes 14–21 days. Nigerian customs (NCS) clearance of 3–7 days is built into these windows — it's the slowest leg, not the air transit.
What does it cost to send a parcel from Udaipur to Nigeria?
Documents up to 500 g start at ₹2,200 (Express). 1 kg parcel from ₹2,900 (Express). 5 kg parcel from ₹11,800 Express / ₹8,200 Economy. Above 10 kg gets negotiable rates. Final quote depends on weight, zone and fuel surcharge.
Why is Nigerian customs clearance so slow?
Nigeria's customs (NCS) requires multiple documents — Form M, PAAR, commercial invoice, packing list and often a NAFDAC permit (food / medicine) or SONCAP certificate (regulated goods). Bank-transfer pre-payment of duty is usually required before NCS releases the parcel. Standard clearance is 3–7 business days at Lagos. DHL and FedEx have priority lanes that help, which is why we recommend Express. Personal-use parcels under $500 with clean paperwork clear faster (3–5 days).
Will the recipient have to pay duty in Nigeria?
Yes for most commercial parcels. Standard VAT is 7.5% on CIF + duty, plus 1% CISS and various levies. Import duty is 0–35% by HS code. Personal-use expat care packages under $500 with proper declaration often clear without significant duty, but NCS still levies VAT and processing fees. Recipient or their clearing agent handles payment before NCS releases the parcel.
Can I send Indian sweets / mithai to Nigeria?
Yes — dry sweets only with NAFDAC-compliant labels. Laddoo, barfi, kaju katli, chakli, namkeen with sealed packaging, FSSAI mark, ingredients list, manufacture and expiry dates clear NCS & NAFDAC. No fresh dairy, no ghee, no liquid sweets. Book 12+ days ahead of festivals to allow NCS clearance.
Can I send ayurvedic medicine to family in Nigeria?
Yes — tablets and powders with proper documentation. Personal-use quantities (3-month supply max) of Patanjali, Himalaya, Charak, Baidyanath etc. clear with the original Indian Rx and ingredient declaration. No liquid ayurvedic syrups. Bulk commercial quantities require NAFDAC pre-approval. Allopathic prescription drugs need the recipient's Nigerian doctor's prescription.
Can I ship B2B samples to Indian companies in Nigeria?
Yes — this is one of our most common Nigeria categories. Samples to Indorama, Bharti Airtel Africa, Olam, Tata, Dr Reddy's, Suzuki and Indian construction / textile firms. We prepare commercial invoice with HS codes, KYC of both parties and coordinate with the recipient's clearing agent. NAFDAC pre-approval needed for pharma / food; SONCAP for many regulated goods — we'll flag what's needed before booking.
Which Nigerian cities do you deliver to?
All 36 states and FCT (Abuja) — every city, town and rural address. Major destinations: Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, Ibadan, Benin City, Calabar, Enugu, Kaduna, Owerri, Warri, Jos. Lagos and Abuja are fastest; northern and rural addresses may add 1–2 days from the Lagos gateway.
What can I NOT send to Nigeria?
Used clothing (banned), used tyres (banned), used vehicles older than 12 years, liquids of any form (oils, ghee, syrups, perfumes, achaar), fresh fruits / vegetables, dairy, meat / fish / eggs, plants / seeds / soil, pharmaceuticals without NAFDAC approval, counterfeit goods, narcotics, lithium batteries above 100 Wh on air, currency above $10,000 undeclared. Call us if unsure — Nigerian customs confiscates rather than returns.
How do I track my Udaipur → Nigeria shipment?
We share the AWB (air waybill) number on WhatsApp right after pickup. Track on the carrier's site (DHL/FedEx/DTDC) or paste the AWB at dtdc.com/track-your-shipment. We send WhatsApp updates at NCS clearance milestones and final delivery — important since NCS can take 3–7 days.
Can I insure my Nigeria parcel?
Yes — declared value insurance from 1–2% of declared value. Strongly recommended for jewellery, B2B samples, original certificates and anything irreplaceable, given NCS handling time. Standard carrier liability without insurance is limited and Nigeria has higher loss rates than the West, so insurance is worth it.
How much does it cost to send a 5 kg parcel from Udaipur to Nigeria?
5 kg Express (DHL/FedEx) ~₹11,800 (door delivery 6–9 days). Standard ~₹9,800 (8–12 days). Economy ~₹8,200 (14–21 days). All-in pricing — includes pickup, packaging, customs paperwork, AWB. Recipient pays 7.5% VAT + duty + clearing-agent fees on commercial value.
Do you ship to PO Box / landmark addresses in Nigeria?
Many Nigerian addresses still use PO Box + landmark rather than the new 6-digit postcode — that's fine for DHL and FedEx as long as the recipient phone number is provided (couriers always call before delivery in Nigeria). Pure PO Box without phone won't work — we need a physical street address or building landmark with phone.
Should I use Express or Standard for Nigeria?
Express (DHL / FedEx) for anything time-sensitive — documents, B2B samples, festival sweets, urgent parcels. The premium pays for itself in NCS priority-clearance lanes. Standard or Economy is only worth it for non-urgent personal parcels where the extra 5–10 days don't matter. Don't use Economy for documents — NCS clearance in the economy lane can stretch beyond 7 days.