SpearfishingMap

Nigeria

Africa · Western Africa

Nigerian federal law does not specifically mention, license, or prohibit recreational underwater fishing (spearfishing). The two principal fisheries statutes - the Sea Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 71) for marine/territorial waters and EEZ, and the Inland Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 108) for inland waters - are framed around licensing of motorised fishing craft/vessels and commercial trawling. Their licensing duties attach to 'motor fishing boats' and 'motor fishing craft', not to an individual swimmer using a hand-held speargun. Neither Act lists spearguns or spearfishing among prohibited methods; the prohibited-method provisions target explosives, noxious/poisonous matter and (inland) electricity. No dedicated recreational/sport-fishing licence regime, season, catch limit or speargun rule for individual spearfishers was found in official sources. Practical constraints that do apply: the Sea Fisheries (Fishing) Regulations 1992 bar 'motor fishing boats' from fishing within the first five nautical miles of the continental shelf (this restriction is written for motorised boats, not shore-access free-divers), and minimum sizes exist for lobster (7 cm) and crab (6 cm) with mandatory release of berried (egg-bearing) crabs/lobsters. Because no provision squarely addresses recreational spearfishing, its legality is best described as legally unaddressed / unknown rather than clearly permitted or prohibited; anyone using a motorised boat to access spearfishing grounds in territorial waters would fall under the boat-licensing regime.

Unknown
Data confidenceLow confidence

Last updated June 15, 2026

Governing framework

  • §Sea Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 71), Laws of the Federation of Nigeria (Cap. S4)
  • §Sea Fisheries (Fishing) Regulations 1992 (S.I. 19 of 1992), under section 14 of the Sea Fisheries Act
  • §Sea Fisheries (Licensing) Regulations 1992 (S.I. 18 of 1992)
  • §Inland Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 108), Laws of the Federation of Nigeria

The law, verbatim

Legal texts

The exact statutory and regulatory provisions that govern spearfishing here, quoted as published, with a link to each official source.

01Section 10Federal Republic of Nigeria · national

Prohibited method of fishing (marine)

Sea Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 71)

ENOriginal

10. Prohibited method of fishing. (1) No person shall take or destroy or attempt to take or destroy any fish within the territorial waters of Nigeria or its exclusive economic zone by any of the following methods, that is- (a) by the use of any explosive substance; or (b) by the use of any noxious or poisonous matter. (2) Any person, who contravenes the provisions of subsection (1) of this section, shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to imprisonment for two years or a fine of N50,000.

02Section 1Federal Republic of Nigeria · national

Licensing of motor fishing boats (marine)

Sea Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 71)

ENOriginal

1. Licensing of motor fishing boats. (1) Subject to the provisions of this section, no person shall operate or navigate any motor fishing boat for the purpose of fishing or a reefer vessel for the purpose of discharging frozen fish within the territorial waters of Nigeria or its exclusive economic zone, unless that boat or reefer vessel has been duly registered and licensed. (2) Any person operating or navigating or causing to be operated or navigated a motor fishing boat or a reefer vessel in contravention of subsection (1) of this section shall be guilty of an offence under this Act and on conviction shall be liable to imprisonment for five years or to a fine of N250,000 or to both such fine and imprisonment and in addition forfeiture of the motor fishing boat and the fish or shrimp catch on board.

03Section 15Federal Republic of Nigeria · national

Interpretation - definitions of fish, fishing boat, motor fishing boat, taking fish (marine)

Sea Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 71)

ENOriginal

15. Interpretation. In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires- ... "fish" means any aquatic creature whether fish or not and includes shell-fish, crustaceans, turtles and aquatic mammals; "fishing boat" means any ship, boat, canoe or other craft used for the taking of fish for sale or barter; ... "motor fishing boat" means any fishing boat propelled by means of steam, internal combustion or other machinery except one or more portable outboard engines; ... "taking fish" includes any method of catching fish; "territorial waters of Nigeria" has the same meaning as in section 1 of the Territorial Waters Act.

04Regulation 1Federal Republic of Nigeria · national

Restriction on fishing within five nautical miles of the continental shelf

Sea Fisheries (Fishing) Regulations 1992 (S.I. 19 of 1992)

ENOriginal

1. Restriction on fishing in certain areas. No motor fishing boat (except canoes) shall fish within the first five nautical miles of the waters of the Nigeria continental shelf.

05Regulations 12, 19 and 20Federal Republic of Nigeria · national

Minimum size of lobster and crab; release of berried crabs and lobsters

Sea Fisheries (Fishing) Regulations 1992 (S.I. 19 of 1992)

ENOriginal

12. Minimum size. The minimum size in relation to seafish for a lobster shall be 7 cm in length, for a crab 6 cm in length, measured from the tip of the beak to the end of the flap of the tail when spread as far as possible flat. ... 19. Possession of undersized lobster or crab. No person shall keep on board either dead or alive or offer for sale any lobster or crab less than 7 cm or 6 cm respectively. 20. Release of berried crabs, etc. Any berried crab or lobster caught by whatever means shall be returned to the waters.

06Section 6Federal Republic of Nigeria · national

Prohibition of unorthodox fishing methods (inland waters)

Inland Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 108)

ENOriginal

6. Prohibition of unorthodox fishing methods. (1) Except for electro-fishing and the use of chemicals for the purpose of research, no person shall take or destroy or attempt to take or destroy any fish within the inland waters of Nigeria by any of the following methods, that is- (a) the use of explosive substances; (b) the use of noxious or poisonous matter; or (c) the use of electricity. (2) A person who contravenes a provision of subsection (1) of this section commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine of N3,000 or imprisonment for a term of two years or to both such fine and imprisonment.

07Section 1Federal Republic of Nigeria · national

Licensing of fishing craft (inland waters)

Inland Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 108)

ENOriginal

1. Licensing of fishing craft. (1) As from the commencement of this Act no person shall operate a motor fishing craft (in this Act referred to as a "craft") within the inland waters of Nigeria unless a licence in respect of that craft has been issued to the owner or operator of the craft under this Act. (2) A person who operates or causes to be operated a craft in contravention of subsection (1) of this section commits an offence and is liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding N500 or imprisonment for a term of six months or to both such fine and imprisonment.

08Section 16Federal Republic of Nigeria · national

Interpretation - definitions of fish, fishing, motor fishing craft (inland waters)

Inland Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 108)

ENOriginal

16. Interpretation. ... "closed season" means a specific period during which fishing is prohibited; ... "fish" means all living aquatic animals, vertebrates and invertebrates, other than plants, which are harvestable for food and other economic purposes; "fishing" means the catching, taking or harvesting of fish, attempted catching, taking or harvesting of fish and any other activity which can reasonably result in the catching, taking or harvesting of fish; ... "licence" means a permit to operate a motor fishing craft for the act of taking fish; ... "motor fishing craft" means a vessel which is used for or equipped to be used for fishing.

When you can dive

Seasons & time restrictions

Closed, open and restricted periods across the year. Always confirm species-specific closures locally.

No seasonal closures recorded — verify locally before diving.

Permission to fish

License

What you need to be allowed in the water, what it costs, and how to get it.

License: unknown — verify locallyvia Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (Federal Department of Fisheries) for marine waters; State Commissioner for fisheries for inland waters
Get your license

Opens the official portal · faolex.fao.org

Authority
Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (Federal Department of Fisheries) for marine waters; State Commissioner for fisheries for inland waters

Gear & technique

Equipment rules

What gear is permitted, how it may be used, and the conditions attached.

Neither the Sea Fisheries Act 1992 nor the Inland Fisheries Act 1992 nor their regulations mention spearguns, scuba gear or spearfishing. Prohibited methods are explosives and noxious/poisonous matter (marine), and additionally electricity (inland, outside research). Spearfishing equipment is therefore neither expressly permitted nor expressly prohibited under the official texts reviewed.

What you may take

Catch limits & protected species

Daily quotas, minimum sizes, and species that must never be taken.

Daily limit

unknown

Minimum sizes

  • Lobstermin 7 cm
  • Crabmin 6 cm

Protected species — do not take

  • ProtectedTurtles (included within the statutory definition of 'fish' under the Sea Fisheries Act and protected under separate Nigerian endangered-species legislation)
  • ProtectedBerried (egg-bearing) crabs and lobsters - must be returned to the water (Sea Fisheries (Fishing) Regulations 1992, reg. 20)

Minimum sizes for lobster (7 cm) and crab (6 cm) and the mandatory release of berried crabs/lobsters apply generally under the Sea Fisheries (Fishing) Regulations 1992 regardless of capture method. The Nigerian Institute for Oceanography and Marine Research may publish minimum total lengths for commercial fish species annually (reg. 14). No recreational daily bag limit was found in official sources.

Who may fish

Visitors & residents

How the rules differ for foreign visitors and local residents.

Foreign visitors

No specific rule addressing foreign recreational spearfishers was found. Commercial vessel licensing under the Sea Fisheries (Licensing) Regulations requires Nigerian registration and flying the Nigerian flag; vessel applications must record the nationality of applicants/partners/directors, but these provisions concern commercial fishing vessels, not individual recreational divers.

Residents

No residents-specific recreational spearfishing regime found in official sources.

Where on the coast

Allowed & prohibited zones

Named areas that are open to or closed for spearfishing. See the full picture on the interactive map.

Prohibited areas

  • Inshore zone - within 5 nautical miles of the Nigerian continental shelfinshore fishing exclusion zone (motorised boats)

    Under Regulation 1 of the Sea Fisheries (Fishing) Regulations 1992, no motor fishing boat (except canoes) may fish within the first five nautical miles of the waters of the Nigeria continental shelf. This restriction is drafted for motorised fishing boats; it does not by its terms address individual free-diving/shore-access spearfishers, but anyone using a motorised boat to reach spearfishing grounds in this band would be caught by it.

Who to ask

Authorities

The official bodies responsible for fisheries and licensing.

  • Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development - Federal Department of Fisheries and Aquaculture

    fisheries authority

  • Nigerian Institute for Oceanography and Marine Research (NIOMR)

    marine research institute

Where this comes from

Sources

Every claim on this page traces back to one of these references.

  1. [01]

    Sea Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 71) and Subsidiary Legislation incl. Sea Fisheries (Fishing) Regulations 1992 - full text (FAOLEX, FAO)

    Official
    faolex.fao.orgAccessed Jun 15
  2. [02]

    Inland Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 108) - full text (FAOLEX, FAO)

    Official
    faolex.fao.orgAccessed Jun 15
  3. [03]

    Sea Fisheries Act, 1992 - record (FAOLEX/Ecolex)

    Official
    ecolex.orgAccessed Jun 15
  4. [04]

    Sea Fisheries Act - Nigeria - Global Fishing Legislative Database (The Outlaw Ocean Project)

    Secondary
    theoutlawocean.comAccessed Jun 15

Researcher notes

Confidence is LOW because no Nigerian instrument directly regulates recreational spearfishing; the legal picture is inferred from general fisheries statutes that target commercial/motorised fishing. Verbatim law texts are sourced from the official FAOLEX (FAO) PDFs of the Sea Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 71) and the Inland Fisheries Act 1992 (No. 108), both downloaded and parsed directly. Currency caveat: monetary penalties are stated in 1992 Naira figures as in the original instruments and have not been revised here; Nigeria's federal fisheries framework is in the process of reform (a Nigeria Fisheries and Aquaculture bill has been under consideration) but no enacted replacement was confirmed in official sources at the time of access, so the 1992 Acts are treated as the governing law. No marine protected area with spearfishing-specific prohibitions and no recreational closed season were located in authoritative sources. Practical advice for users: confirm locally with the Federal Department of Fisheries before spearfishing, as enforcement and any state-level by-laws may add restrictions not captured in federal texts.

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