There is a particular kind of statement that only a hypercar can make. Not a speech, not a social media post, just the low growl of a V12 engine rolling through the gates of a Banana Island compound. In Nigeria’s entertainment industry, your garage is your CV, and the 2025-2026 period has produced some of the most jaw-dropping automotive statements the country has ever seen.
With import duties routinely doubling or tripling the original sticker price, getting a luxury car into Lagos or Abuja is as much a logistical achievement as a financial one. Yet Nigeria’s top earners, paid largely in dollars and pounds from international tours and global brand deals, keep raising the bar. Here is who is driving what, and exactly what it costs them.
Burna Boy: McLaren Senna Exposed Carbon Edition, ₦3.2 Billion
Nobody comes close. Damini Ogulu’s collection, estimated at roughly ₦19 billion ($13 million), is the largest of any Nigerian entertainer and it is not particularly close. The crown jewel is his McLaren Senna Exposed Carbon Edition, acquired in 2025 through AbujaCar for ₦3.2 billion. Only 15 of this specific variant exist worldwide, making it the most expensive privately-owned vehicle in Nigerian history. It produces 789 horsepower, reaches 100 km/h in under three seconds, and was previously owned by YouTube channel Daily Driven Exotics.
The Senna is just the headline. Burna Boy also took delivery of a yellow 2025 Lamborghini Revuelto worth around ₦1.5 billion, reportedly the first 2025 Revuelto on the entire African continent. Before that came a Ferrari Purosangue at ₦2.1 billion, Ferrari’s first-ever SUV in a one-of-one custom specification. Then on Valentine’s Day 2026, he added a Porsche 911 GT3 RS worth over ₦400 million, delivered straight to his house. The rest of his fleet includes a Lamborghini Aventador SVJ, Ferrari 812 GTS, Rolls-Royce Black Badge Cullinan, and a Mercedes-AMG G63 Grand Edition. Fifteen-plus cars, one very large garage.
Davido: Rolls-Royce Spectre, ₦840 Million to ₦1 Billion
David Adeleke approaches car collecting the way he approaches music: with relentless volume and occasional brilliance. In late 2024, he became the first Nigerian celebrity to own a Rolls-Royce Spectre, the brand’s fully electric grand tourer. The Arctic White machine delivers 577 horsepower with zero emissions and was spotted cruising Lagos almost immediately after delivery.
His 2025 additions kept coming. He secured a 2026 Mercedes-Maybach SL 680 Monogram Edition before its official global release, making it one of the most exclusive vehicles in his collection at around ₦1.2 billion. A Lamborghini Revuelto with gold-accented rims (₦1.4 billion), a Rolls-Royce Black Badge Cullinan (₦1.08 billion), and a matte-black Tesla Cybertruck (₦254 to ₦400 million) also joined the fleet. For his wife Chioma’s 30th birthday, he added a Mercedes-Benz G-Wagon worth ₦450 million, because apparently that is just how he does birthdays. Davido’s total garage is estimated at $10 to $14 million.
Wizkid: McLaren 750S MSO Spider, ₦1.5 to ₦1.7 Billion
Ayodeji Balogun does not do car reveal videos. He simply turns up driving them. His Ferrari SF90 Stradale (₦1.2 to ₦1.4 billion) is a 986-horsepower plug-in hybrid that previously held the record for the most expensive celebrity car in Nigeria, before Burna Boy’s McLaren arrived and changed the conversation. His Ferrari 296 GTB Assetto Fiorano briefly held that record too, at ₦1.4 billion.
In late December 2024, Wizkid added a McLaren 750S MSO Spider in all black, valued at ₦1.5 to ₦1.7 billion with full McLaren Special Operations customisation. He reportedly owns up to five Rolls-Royces, a Lamborghini Urus, Bentley Continental GT, and a Porsche Panamera. The total sits somewhere between ₦6 billion and ₦17 billion depending on the source. Big Wiz is not interested in announcing it. He already knows.
Rema: Bentley Bentayga Extended Wheelbase, ₦700 Million
Divine Ikubor is still in his mid-twenties and already building a collection that demands respect. He assembled an all-black fleet in 2024, purchasing a Lamborghini Urus S (₦450 million) and Mercedes-AMG G63 on the same day for a combined ₦700 million-plus. In late 2024, he added a Bentley Bentayga Extended Wheelbase at ₦700 million. His McLaren GTS, delivered by Polanco Exotic Cars in 2025 as the first of its kind in Nigeria, is valued at over ₦600 million.
He marked his collection reveal on X with the caption: “I no get competition, my enemy na sapa.” The BMW Club of Nigeria also gifted him an 8 Series Convertible as part of a brand partnership. At this rate, he is not far behind the big three.
Don Jazzy: Rolls-Royce Phantom 8 EWB Mansory Edition, ₦840 Million
Don Jazzy prefers to make his automotive statements all at once. In November 2024, he acquired three luxury vehicles in a single day: a Rolls-Royce Phantom 8 EWB Mansory Edition (₦840 million), a Range Rover Autobiography LWB (₦280 million), and a Cadillac Escalade 600 (₦170 million), all shipped through US dealer Mr. Jay Autos. The combined bill exceeded ₦1.3 billion, making it one of the biggest single-day celebrity car purchases in Nigerian history. For someone who had been relatively quiet about cars for years, that was quite the reintroduction.
Seyi Vibez: Lamborghini Urus, ₦612 Million
Seyi Vibez is the face of a very Nigerian success story, and his garage makes the point better than any interview could. His Lamborghini Urus, valued at ₦612 million, anchors a collection that already exceeded ₦800 million before 2025 even began. In early 2025, he reportedly bought a Ferrari, a white Chevrolet Corvette, and a Maserati on the same day, just for good measure. The Urus remains a favourite across Nigeria’s entertainment elite for a practical reason: it handles Lagos roads better than any low-slung supercar ever could, without sacrificing the statement.
Cubana Chief Priest: Rolls-Royce Cullinan Series II, ₦1.7 Billion
Pascal Okechukwu runs an all-black fleet theme and he takes it seriously. Around Christmas 2025, he added a Rolls-Royce Cullinan Series II to his collection, one of very few in the country, valued at up to ₦1.7 billion. It was his second Cullinan. Earlier in the year, he gifted his wife an Extended Long Wheelbase Range Rover Autobiography worth roughly ₦400 million, and his broader fleet already included a Mercedes-Maybach GLS 450 and a Cadillac Escalade 600. The man clearly does not believe in half measures.
Obi Cubana: Rolls-Royce Cullinan, ₦600 Million
Ifeanyi Okonkwo rang in the end of 2025 by rolling up to the last Sunday service of the year in a brand-new 2026 Rolls-Royce Cullinan worth over ₦600 million. His existing fleet, which includes a bulletproof Mercedes-Maybach S580 Guard, an all-white Range Rover Autobiography, a Brabus G-Wagon, and a Rolls-Royce Phantom, already stood as one of Nigeria’s most formidable private collections. The Cullinan addition simply confirmed what most people already suspected: the Cubana Group chairman is not done yet.
E-Money: Rolls-Royce Phantom, Undisclosed
Emeka Okonkwo owns two Rolls-Royce Phantoms, one for himself and one he bought as a Christmas gift for his wife. His collection extends to bulletproof Lexus LX 570s and customised Mercedes Sprinters, but what sets E-Money apart is what he does with cars rather than what he keeps. For his February 2025 birthday, he gave away more than 20 vehicles and ₦200 million in cash, distributing Toyota Land Cruisers, Hiluxes, Camrys, and Honda Accords to staff, comedians, and security personnel. Some people buy cars. E-Money hands them out like party favours.
Mercy Eke: Lamborghini Urus, ₦340 to ₦500 Million
BBNaija Season 4’s first female winner had been nicknamed “Lamborghini Mercy” long before she actually owned one. On 27 February 2025, she delivered on the nickname with an orange-and-black Lamborghini Urus worth ₦340 to ₦500 million. Days later, socialite Sophia Egbueje bought her own Urus, and former BBNaija star Beauty Tukura was spotted in a red one. Three women, three Lamborghinis, within weeks of each other. The wave turned the Urus from a “man’s car” into a symbol of female financial power in Nigeria, and nobody who watched it happen could pretend the culture is not shifting.
Why Car Prices Keep Climbing
Import duties in Nigeria routinely double or triple the manufacturer’s asking price. Shipping a car by air freight to avoid port handling damage costs up to $30,000. Specialised technicians for high-voltage hybrid vehicles like the Revuelto and SF90 are scarce across West Africa, pushing maintenance costs even higher. A car priced at $500,000 in the United States will frequently cost over $1 million by the time it carries Nigerian plates.
Two dealerships have transformed how these purchases happen. Polanco Exotic Cars on the Lekki-Epe Expressway and AbujaCar in Abuja have built celebrity-level reputations of their own, making viral delivery videos a routine part of doing business. Their Nigerian buyers no longer need to fly to Dubai or London to access hypercars. The market has arrived on home soil.
Nigeria’s celebrity garage culture is accelerating. Burna Boy has set a benchmark that will define the conversation for years, Davido keeps buying at a pace that defies logic, and Wizkid accumulates billion-naira Ferraris without saying a word about it. Below them, a new generation, Rema, Seyi Vibez, Mercy Eke, is proving the ambition is not slowing down. If anything, the cars are just getting more expensive.


