2027: INEC Seeks N873bn For Polls, Proposes N171bn 2026 Budget

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has proposed N873.778 billion for the conduct of the 2027 general elections.

INEC Chairman, Prof. Joash Amupitan, disclosed this during the presentation of the Commission’s 2026 budget proposal and projected cost for the 2027 polls before the National Assembly Joint Committee on Electoral Matters in Abuja Thursday.

Amupitan clarified that the proposed N873.778 billion election budget is separate from INEC’s 2026 appropriation proposal, which puts the Commission’s operational expenditure at N171 billion.

The 2026 allocation is expected to cover routine activities, including the conduct of by-elections and off-cycle governorship elections.

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He noted that the projected election cost excludes a fresh request by the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) seeking an upward review of allowances for corps members deployed as ad-hoc election staff.

Providing a breakdown of the projected election budget, the INEC chairman said the estimate is structured across five major components, including N379.748 billion for operational expenses, N92.317 billion for administrative costs, N209.206 billion for technological requirements, N154.905 billion for election capital projects and N42.608 billion for miscellaneous expenses.

Amupitan explained that the budget proposal was prepared in compliance with Section 3(3) of the Electoral Act 2022, which mandates the Commission to prepare its election budget at least one year before the general election.

On the 2026 fiscal projections, he revealed that the Ministry of Finance had issued the Commission a budget envelope of N140 billion, while INEC proposed a total expenditure of N171 billion, comprising N109 billion for personnel costs, N18.7 billion for overheads, N42.63 billion for election-related activities, and N1.4 billion for capital expenditure.

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The INEC chairman expressed concerns over the envelope budgeting system, describing it as unsuitable for the Commission’s operations due to the urgent and unpredictable nature of electoral activities.

He also identified the absence of a Independent National Electoral Commission communications network as a major operational challenge.

Speaking during the session, Senator Adams Oshiomhole (Edo North) argued that external agencies should not impose budgeting frameworks on INEC, considering the sensitive nature of its mandate and urged Parliament to align funding with the Commission’s actual requirements.

Similarly, a member of the House of Representatives, Billy Osawaru, called for INEC’s budget to be placed on first line charge as stipulated in the Constitution, while the Joint Committee approved a motion recommending a one time release of the Commission’s annual budget and said it would consider NYSC’s request for about N32 billion to increase allowances for corps members to N125,000 during election duties.

Chairman of the Senate Committee on INEC, Senator Simon Lalong assured legislative support for the Commission, while Chairman of the House Committee on Electoral Matters, Rep. Bayo Balogun, cautioned INEC against making promises it may not fulfil, recalling the controversy surrounding assurances on real fime result uploads to the INEC Result Viewing (IREV) portal during the last general election.

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