2026 TEA OH 30

Nigeria does not only have an image problem. It has a confidence gap.

And tourism feels that gap first. In global travel decisions, perception often precedes reality.
Safety. Stability. Protection. Predictability.

These are not abstract ideas.They are underwriting questions.

Which is why insurance is not peripheral to tourism. It is foundational.

If tourism is to become bankable, insurable, and investable,
insurance must be integrated into its architecture not added as an afterthought.

Tourism Is a Risk-Managed Industry ;Or It Is Not

Every tourism journey carries exposure:

  • flight disruption
    • medical emergencies
    • event cancellation
    • property damage
    • liability claims
    • force majeure incidents

In many advanced markets, these risks are structured into protection systems. In Nigeria, protection is fragmented. And where protection is fragmented, perception deteriorates.

Insurance is not only about paying claims. It is about signalling readiness.

Reframing Nigeria Through Protection

Nigeria is often framed globally through the lens of insecurity.

Whether exaggerated or contextual, perception shapes behaviour.

What if we countered that narrative structurally?

Imagine:

  • mandatory, bundled domestic travel insurance for major tourism events
    • automatic medical cover for inbound travellers
    • verified “insured tourism operator” badges
    • nationwide event liability frameworks
    • emergency response-backed travel protection systems

Insurance becomes part of the tourism experience not separate from it. When a traveller knows that protection is built into the system, hesitation reduces.

Confidence increases mobility.

The Traveller Side

Inbound visitors ask three questions:

Is it safe? If something happens, what support exists? Will I be protected?

If Nigerian tourism packages include:

  • short-term travel insurance
    • medical evacuation partnerships
    • event cancellation protection
    • refund assurance

we shift from defensive communication to structural reassurance. Insurance does not eliminate risk. It reduces fear. And fear is often the real barrier to travel.

The SME Side: Making Tourism Truly Bankable

We speak frequently about tourism being “bankable.” But banking depends on risk assessment.

If tourism SMEs lack:

  • business interruption cover
    • liability insurance
    • event indemnity protection
    • asset protection
    • climate risk coverage

then capital remains cautious. Insurance products tailored to tourism operators would:

  • reduce lender hesitation
    • protect revenue cycles
    • strengthen investment confidence
    • professionalise the sector

An insured ecosystem is a finance-ready ecosystem.

 

Bundled Protection as Strategy

Nigeria could pioneer:

  • “Travel Nigeria Secure” insurance frameworks
    • State-backed event insurance pools
    • Tourism SME indemnity schemes
    • Climate-linked coverage for coastal and heritage destinations
    • Golf and sports tournament protection models
    • Diaspora return coverage packages

Protection can be integrated into:

  • airline bookings
    • hotel check-ins
    • event ticket platforms
    • tour operator systems

Insurance becomes invisible infrastructure.

The National Opportunity

Insurance companies in Nigeria are sophisticated. Tourism is growing.

But the two industries have not fully aligned strategically.

There is opportunity for:

  • Dedicated Tourism Insurance Desks
    • Joint product design between insurers and tourism operators
    • Risk-mapping collaboration with state governments
    • Crisis-response simulation exercises
    • Public-private tourism resilience funds

Insurance firms benefit from:

  • new product categories
    • ESG positioning
    • expanded premium bases
    • national visibility

Tourism benefits from:

  • credibility
    • investment readiness
    • structured risk management
    • global reassurance

This is not charity.
It is commercial alignment.

 

Tourism as a Reputation Reset Tool

Nigeria does not need to argue its safety record. It needs to structure its confidence systems.

Insurance can become part of national positioning: “This destination is protected.
This event is insured. This operator is covered.”

Confidence is economic oxygen. Without it, growth stalls. With it, markets expand.

If Nigeria is serious about: • repositioning its image • attracting inbound traffic                        • professionalising its tourism sector • making tourism finance-ready

then insurance must be embedded into tourism policy conversations immediately.

Not as an auxiliary product. As core infrastructure.

Insurance companies have an opportunity to become architects of tourism growth not just claim processors.

And tourism leaders must design products with insurers at the table from the beginning.

Final Thoughts

Tourism without protection is fragile. Tourism with structured protection is investable.

Insecurity narratives cannot be erased overnight.

But they can be counterbalanced through systems.

Insurance is not simply a financial service.

It is a confidence strategy. And confidence, when institutionalised, becomes capital.

Insurance leaders who step into tourism early will not simply underwrite events or travel packages they will underwrite confidence in Nigeria’s mobility economy.

Structured collaboration between insurers and tourism architects can redefine how Nigeria presents safety, resilience, and credibility to the world.

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