Most people know they need to save for japa. The part that is harder is knowing exactly how much, in which account, protected from what, and by when.
The typical approach goes something like this: decide you want to japa, open a savings account, put money in when there is something left at the end of the month, and hope it accumulates fast enough. Then naira depreciates. NEPA takes the freezer money. A family emergency clears a quarter of what took four months to build. You restart, discouraged, without a clear idea of whether you are behind or on track.
A 12-month savings plan does not require a high salary. It requires a specific target, a structured approach, and a system that protects your money from the three things that consistently drain Nigerian savings: inflation, emergencies, and vague financial boundaries.
This article gives you that structure.
Quick Summary
- Before you save a single naira toward japa, you need a specific savings target in your destination currency, not a naira amount, because the naira-to-target conversion changes constantly.
- Your japa savings plan has two separate components: preparation and visa costs (spent before you travel) and settlement funds (held as proof of funds, then used after arrival).
- Saving in naira alone is risky for a long-term japa fund. Consider dollar-denominated accounts or stablecoins if you have a longer runway.
- Emergencies will happen. Build a separate emergency buffer so a crisis does not reset your japa savings to zero.
- 12 months is achievable for people on average Nigerian salaries, but it requires a real commitment, not a casual approach.
Step 1: Calculate Your Actual Savings Target Before You Start
Saving without a target is the most common reason japa savings plans collapse. You cannot know if you are on track if you do not know where the finish line is.
Your target is not “enough money.” Your target is a specific figure in the destination currency that covers four things:
- Preparation costs (IELTS, credential assessment, document authentication, medical exams, passport renewal if needed)
- Visa application costs (the visa fee itself, plus IHS for the UK or settlement fund requirement for Canada)
- Travel costs (flight ticket, initial accommodation deposit, first month’s rent)
- Settlement costs (3 to 6 months of living expenses in your destination city)
Read the DeyWithMe article on the full cost of japa to build this figure for your specific route. Then convert that destination currency amount to naira using a live exchange rate, not a rate from months ago.
That naira figure is your 12-month target. Write it down. Put it somewhere visible.
Step 2: Understand Where Your Money Actually Goes Right Now
You cannot find more money to save without understanding where your current money is going. This is not about judgment. It is about information.
For one month, track every naira you spend. Use a notes app, a spreadsheet, or any budgeting tool. At the end of the month, categorise your spending into three buckets:
- Fixed obligations: rent, transport to work, phone, loan repayments, family contributions
- Variable necessities: food, utilities, healthcare
- Discretionary spending: eating out, data beyond minimum, subscriptions, entertainment, impulse buying
Most people are surprised by how much sits in the third bucket. That is not a moral failing; it is just where unplanned spending goes. For a 12-month japa savings plan, a significant portion of that third bucket needs to be redirected.
This exercise also reveals which fixed obligations can be renegotiated. Can you move to a cheaper living arrangement? Can a family contribution be temporarily reduced with an honest conversation? These are real questions with real impact.
Step 3: Set a Monthly Savings Rate and Automate It
Once you know your target and understand your cashflow, divide your target by 12. That is your monthly savings number.
If the number looks impossible against your income, you have two options: extend the timeline to 18 or 24 months, or find ways to increase your income alongside cutting costs. Both paths are valid; the important thing is that your monthly savings number is realistic, not aspirational.
Automate the transfer. On the day your salary hits your account, move your japa savings contribution immediately to a separate account. Do not wait to see what is left at the end of the month. There will never be as much left as you hope.
This is the single most effective savings habit you can build. Treat your japa savings like a bill that is paid first.
Step 4: Choose the Right Account Structure
Where you save matters almost as much as how much you save. For a 12-month japa fund, you need two things: protection from yourself and protection from naira depreciation.
For naira-denominated savings: A high-yield savings account or a fixed deposit at a Nigerian bank locks your money away and makes it harder to access impulsively. Some banks offer naira fixed deposits with reasonable interest rates. This works for the shorter-term portion of your savings that you will spend in Nigeria (authentication fees, IELTS, passport costs).
For dollar-denominated savings: For the larger portion of your fund, especially the visa fees, IHS, settlement funds, and travel costs that will be paid in foreign currency, saving in naira means you are exposed to exchange rate movement. Every time the naira weakens, your target in naira terms gets larger.
Options Nigerian savers use for dollar-denominated saving:
- Domiciliary accounts at Nigerian banks (USD savings account)
- Dollar-denominated investment platforms operating legally in Nigeria
- USD stablecoins via regulated crypto platforms (higher risk, worth independent research before using)
None of these are perfect. Each has tradeoffs around access, fees, and regulatory risk. The key point is to have at least part of your savings denominated in a stable currency so depreciation does not silently erode your progress.
Step 5: Build a Separate Emergency Buffer First
This step feels counterintuitive when you are impatient to japa, but it is important.
If your only savings are in your japa fund and an emergency hits, one of two things happens: you drain the japa fund, or you go into debt. Either one sets you back significantly.
Before you build your 12-month japa savings aggressively, build a 2 to 3 month emergency fund in a separate, accessible account. This is not your japa money. It is the buffer that protects your japa money.
For someone earning 250,000 naira monthly with 120,000 naira in monthly expenses, a 2-month emergency buffer is 240,000 naira. That is the foundation that lets the rest of the plan hold.
Once the buffer exists, your japa savings are protected from the first disruption. Crises will still happen; the buffer just means they do not reset your immigration timeline.
Month-by-Month Framework
Here is how a realistic 12-month plan looks for someone with a clear target and consistent income. Adjust the figures to your own situation.
Months 1 to 2: Foundation
- [ ] Calculate your exact savings target in destination currency
- [ ] Track all spending for one full month
- [ ] Build your emergency buffer (2 months of expenses)
- [ ] Open a separate savings account labeled specifically for japa
- [ ] Set up an automated monthly transfer on salary day
Months 3 to 5: Early Preparation Spending
- [ ] Book and sit IELTS (this cost comes out of your preparation budget, not your savings balance)
- [ ] Begin WES or credential assessment application if your route requires it
- [ ] Apply for PCC and begin authentication of documents
- [ ] Continue monthly savings transfers without interruption
Months 6 to 8: Mid-Point Check
- [ ] Review your savings balance against your target. Are you on track?
- [ ] Recalculate your target using the current exchange rate. Has it shifted?
- [ ] If behind, identify specific discretionary spending to cut in months 9 to 12
- [ ] Start researching flights and accommodation costs for your destination city to refine your settlement cost estimate
Months 9 to 11: Final Push
- [ ] All preparation document costs should be mostly settled by now
- [ ] Focus savings on visa fees, settlement funds, and travel costs
- [ ] Avoid any new debt or significant financial commitments
- [ ] If your employer is covering any costs, get written confirmation of exactly what and when
Month 12: Pre-Application Review
- [ ] Confirm your bank statements show consistent savings activity for at least 6 months
- [ ] Verify that your balance meets the proof of funds requirement for your visa type
- [ ] Do a final document audit using DeyWithMe’s japa document checklist
- [ ] Confirm all fees against current official figures on the destination country’s immigration website
Emeka’s 12-Month Japa Plan
Emeka is 28, a secondary school teacher in Lagos earning 180,000 naira monthly. He wants to apply for a Canada study permit in 12 months. His target, after calculating preparation, visa, travel, and 3 months of settlement costs, is approximately CAD 20,000, which at a rough current rate converts to around 20 million naira. That is clearly not achievable in 12 months on his salary alone.
So Emeka adjusts. He extends his timeline to 24 months and takes on weekend private tutoring that brings in an extra 60,000 naira per month. He moves in with his brother to cut rent by 40,000 naira monthly. He freezes discretionary spending aggressively.
His revised monthly savings rate: 100,000 naira, about 55 percent of his combined income. Over 24 months, that is 2.4 million naira. He puts 60 percent in a domiciliary account to limit naira exposure.
It is still not 20 million naira. But he is also applying for a route where his employer (an international school in Canada) will cover his visa fee and initial travel costs. With that, his actual out-of-pocket target drops to around 8 million naira. Achievable in 24 months with discipline.
The lesson: the plan only becomes realistic when the target is specific and the income picture is honest.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much should I save per month to japa in 12 months? Divide your total savings target (in naira, calculated from destination currency costs at the current exchange rate) by 12. That is your monthly number. If the figure exceeds what is realistic given your income, extend the timeline rather than set an unachievable monthly target that you will miss consistently.
Is it better to save in naira or dollars for japa? Both, ideally. Use naira savings for costs you will spend in Nigeria (IELTS, authentication, passport). Use dollar-denominated savings for costs you will pay in foreign currency (visa fees, IHS, settlement funds, flight). Saving everything in naira exposes your fund to exchange rate movement over 12 months, which can meaningfully change how much your savings are actually worth in destination currency terms.
Should I use a fixed deposit for my japa savings? A fixed deposit is good for protecting savings from impulsive spending, and it earns interest. The tradeoff is that accessing the funds before maturity can involve penalties. If you are confident about your timeline, a fixed deposit for the portion you will not need until visa application time makes sense. Keep a more accessible account for costs that arise during preparation.
What if an emergency wipes out my japa savings? This is why the emergency buffer exists as a separate account. If an emergency has already cleared your japa savings, the priority is to rebuild the emergency buffer first before resuming japa savings. Trying to save aggressively without a buffer just means the next emergency clears it again. Two months of expenses in a protected account changes the entire picture.
Can I japa if I don’t have a steady salary? Yes, but it requires more structure, not less. Irregular income means your monthly savings contribution will vary. In high-earning months, save more than your target. In low months, save the minimum you set. The key is that you never go a full month without any contribution to the fund, even if the amount varies.
Start With the Target, Not the Timeline
The 12-month plan only works if you know what 12 months of saving is supposed to achieve. That means calculating your real number first.
If you have not done that yet, that is your starting point today. Read the DeyWithMe japa cost breakdown for your target route, build your figure in destination currency, convert it at today’s rate, and write it down.
Then come back to this article and build your monthly structure around that number.
The DeyWithMe japa savings calculator lets you input your target route, your income, and your current savings to generate a personalised monthly savings plan with a realistic timeline. Use it to turn what you have read here into an actual plan with dates and monthly targets.
