Home » Africa: Banana Island, Ikoyi enforces ban on short-let rentals amid rising security concerns and recent criminal arrests as citizens react

Africa: Banana Island, Ikoyi enforces ban on short-let rentals amid rising security concerns and recent criminal arrests as citizens react

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Banana Island

Banana Island in Ikoyi has announced a ban on short-let and Airbnb-style rentals, citing growing security concerns linked to temporary occupants.

According to nairametrics, the ban is in effect, although the Banana Island Property Owners & Residents Association (BIPORAL) declined to comment on the cause.

Reports from online sources indicate that eight criminal suspects were apprehended after using short-let units as bases for thefts in the exclusive waterfront estate.

What they are saying
The ban has sparked debates around estate security, housing affordability, and investor exposure. Nigerians on platforms like X (formerly Twitter) expressed both support and criticism of the measure.

Nonso (@Kessiedoll)
Nonso (@Kessiedoll) criticised what she described as the excessive expansion of short-let rentals across Lagos, arguing that the growing conversion of residential apartments into nightly rentals has worsened housing scarcity and pushed up rent levels for long-term tenants.

“While I get the idea of short lets, the way we have abused it is so ridiculous. We are experiencing an insane surge and scarcity of rental apartments because people take these places and charge a ridiculous amount per night. Everything is a shortlet.”

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Mr Incredible (@incredibledude9)
Mr Incredible (@incredibledude9) warned that sudden policy decisions could disrupt investments, noting that property owners who financed luxury apartments for short-let use may struggle to meet mortgage obligations if regulatory changes abruptly affect projected revenues.

“Nigeria: where casual policy decisions can wipe out a business overnight without due consideration. Imagine buying and mortgaging a Banana Island flat for short-lets…planning repayments on projected revenue…then a sudden rule change pulls the rug out.”

Riempito Di Nero (@RiempitoN)
Riempito Di Nero (@RiempitoN) supported the ban, arguing that short-let apartments had effectively turned secure residential estates into anonymous hotels where guest vetting was weak, thereby increasing security risks within gated communities.

“This is how a community reacts when the cost of convenience becomes a security threat. The short-let economy turned apartments into anonymous hotels where background checks are an afterthought. It’s not about locking the gate; it’s about knowing who you’re handing the keys to.
“This shutdown is a necessary reset. It’s an admission that you can’t run a luxury fortress while operating a commercial check-in desk with lax vetting. Real security means controlling access and purpose. A business model that compromises the fundamental safety of residents was never sustainable. This is a smart, overdue correction.”

Unpopular Opinion (@Andy_Dgr8)
Unpopular Opinion (@Andy_Dgr8) described short-let apartments as growing security and social risks, alleging that weak guest screening could allow criminal activity within estates while also contributing to disruptive behaviour and declining community standards.

“Short-let apartments are fast becoming a menace. They’ve turned into easy entry points for criminals to infiltrate otherwise decent estates, quietly monitoring residents’ movements and planning robbery attacks. Beyond armed robbers, they also provide cover for fraudsters. Then there’s the moral decay that often goes unchecked in these spaces. In our estate, many of these apartments are frequently occupied by teenagers.
“The level of drug use and reckless lifestyles on display makes you wonder if parental guidance ever existed in their lives at all. Short-lets may be convenient, but the security, social, and moral costs are becoming impossible to ignore. The managers do not even do any proper check-up before accepting guests.”

Talkyourtalk (@Talkingyourtalk)
Talkyourtalk (@Talkingyourtalk) expressed surprise that short-let apartments operated within Banana Island, arguing that the transient flow of unfamiliar guests conflicted with expectations of exclusivity and tightly controlled access within luxury residential estates.

“I never even expected Banana Island to have short let apartments, for obvious reasons. The calibre of people that supposedly stay there will not want such unknown people coming and leaving at will.”

Prettypolitico (@prettypolitico2)
Prettypolitico (@prettypolitico2) noted that several global cities have already implemented strict regulations on short-term rentals, suggesting that the Banana Island decision aligns with broader international trends rather than representing an unusual policy move.

“Many cities have heavily restricted/regulated Airbnb. There are no Airbnbs in NYC, and Toronto only allows you to list your primary property for a few months in the year, for example. This isn’t a strange policy.”

Adetola Adedeji (@Adetolaa_a)

Adetola Adedeji (@Adetolaa_a) argued that the rapid conversion of residential apartments into short-let units has contributed to rising rents in Lagos, while calling for policymakers to consider regulatory frameworks adopted in cities such as Paris and Berlin.

“Apart from the criminal angle of it. The surge and conversation of residential houses into shortlets is the main reason rent in Lagos has gone out of hands. They need to ask what was adopted in Paris and Berlin to curb such.”

Backstory
On Tuesday, February 10, 2026, reports confirmed that short-let rentals have been banned in Banana Island, one of Nigeria’s most exclusive residential estates, home to high-net-worth individuals.

The Banana Island Property Owners and Residents Association (BIPORAL) announced that all short-let and Airbnb-style rentals would be prohibited starting February 9, following a raid at George Residences on Femi Pedro Street.

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