Last Updated: April 2026
The university clearance process in Nigeria 2026 is one of the most important — and most stressful — administrative rites of passage for every fresh student. Without completing clearance, you cannot be officially registered, you will not receive your matriculation number, and you cannot sit for examinations. Yet many newly admitted students arrive on campus with little idea of what clearance involves or what documents they need.
This step-by-step guide walks you through the entire clearance process at Nigerian universities — the documents you need before arrival, the departments you must visit, fees involved, common mistakes that cause delays and exactly what happens after you clear. By the time you finish reading, you will know precisely what to expect and how to move through clearance as quickly as possible.
What Is University Clearance in Nigeria?
University clearance is an administrative process in which a newly admitted student presents their original academic and personal documents to various university departments for verification. Each department checks that the student meets its specific requirements, stamps or signs the student’s clearance form, and returns it. Only after all departments have signed off does the registry assign the student a permanent matriculation number.
Clearance exists to verify that every enrolled student has the correct O’Level qualifications for their programme, a valid JAMB admission confirmed on CAPS, has paid all required fees and is who they claim to be. Universities have revoked admissions during clearance after discovering forged WAEC certificates, incorrect JAMB records or age falsification — so this is a thorough, serious exercise. Confirming your JAMB CAPS admission status before arriving for clearance is essential.
Pre-Clearance Checklist: Documents You Must Have Ready
Before you step into any clearance office, prepare all of the following documents — both originals and certified photocopies (at least five sets of each):
Document | Notes |
|---|---|
JAMB Result Slip | Original printout from the JAMB portal showing your UTME score and course. |
JAMB CAPS Admission Letter | Printed from the JAMB portal after accepting your offer on CAPS. |
University Acceptance Receipt | Generated by the institution’s portal after paying acceptance fee. |
WAEC/NECO Certificate or Result | Original certificate or result slip. Must show credits in required subjects for your course. |
Birth Certificate or Declaration of Age | Original plus certified copies. Court affidavit of age is also acceptable at most universities. |
Local Government Certificate of Origin | Issued by your LGA Secretariat. Must be signed and stamped by a recognised official. |
State of Origin Certificate | Issued by your state government. Some universities require this in addition to the LGA certificate. |
Passport Photographs | Minimum 20–30 passport-sized photos on a white background. |
School Fees Payment Receipt | Generated after paying school fees through the university portal. |
Medical Report | Issued by a registered doctor or the university’s medical centre confirming you are medically fit to study. |
Step-by-Step: The University Clearance Process in Nigeria 2026
While the exact sequence varies by institution, most Nigerian universities follow a similar clearance workflow. Here is a typical step-by-step breakdown:
Step 1: Collect Your Clearance Form
After paying school fees and printing your acceptance receipt, visit the Admissions Office or Registry to collect your clearance form. At many universities, this form is now downloadable from the student portal — log in with your JAMB registration number or portal credentials and look for “New Student Clearance” or “Matriculation Form” under the forms section. Print multiple copies of the clearance form before you begin.
Step 2: Admissions Office — Document Verification
The Admissions Office is usually the first stop. An admissions officer will check your JAMB result slip, CAPS admission letter, O’Level result and the acceptance receipt. They will compare your documents against their internal records received from JAMB. If everything checks out, they stamp your clearance form with “Admitted” or “Cleared” and move you to the next stage. If there is any discrepancy — for example a name spelling mismatch between your JAMB record and your birth certificate — this is where it will surface. Bring an affidavit of name correction if applicable.
Step 3: Bursary / Accounts Department — Fee Verification
The Bursary department confirms that you have paid all required fees: acceptance fee, school fees and any other departmental or faculty levies. Present your payment receipts and the officer will verify them against the payment system. If any fee has not been recorded — even if you have a receipt — the Bursary may place a hold on your clearance. Report any discrepancy immediately with your bank teller or Remita confirmation as evidence.
Step 4: Student Affairs — Personal and Conduct Clearance
The Student Affairs (or Student Services) office handles student welfare, conduct and accommodation records. At this stage you may need to submit your local government letter, state of origin certificate and a passport photograph. Some universities also require you to sign a Code of Conduct agreement at this point. If you were allocated on-campus accommodation, your hostel assignment is also processed here.
Step 5: Medical Centre — Health Screening
The university medical centre conducts a basic health screening to confirm you are fit to study. This typically includes blood group and genotype testing, vision screening and a review of any declared pre-existing conditions. Bring your private medical report (if you obtained one in advance) and your immunisation records if available. The medical centre will issue a clearance stamp after your health check is complete. Budget one to two hours for this step, as queues are often long during the clearance period.
Step 6: Library — Library Card Registration
The university library registers you as a library member during clearance. You will typically need to submit a passport photograph and pay a small library registration fee (usually ₦500 to ₦2,000). Your library card is issued on the spot or collected within a few days. Having your library card is a prerequisite for borrowing books and accessing digital resources — both essential for academic success.
Step 7: Department / Faculty — Academic Clearance
Your Faculty or Department Office will verify that your O’Level subjects meet the specific course entry requirements and that your JAMB score is above the departmental cut-off mark. The Head of Department or a designated officer signs your clearance form here. This is often where students admitted into departments other than their first choice discover they need to re-apply internally — bring documented evidence of all your O’Level subjects and JAMB subjects to this meeting.
Step 8: Registry — Final Clearance and Matriculation Number
The Registry is the final stop. Present your fully signed and stamped clearance form to the Registry officer. After verifying all signatures and stamps, the Registry enters you into the official university register and issues your permanent student matriculation number. This number is your identity within the university system for the entire duration of your programme. Keep it safe — it appears on every examination result, transcript and certificate the university ever issues to you.
How Long Does University Clearance Take?
Clearance timelines vary significantly by institution and by how prepared you are when you arrive. Here is a realistic guide:
Scenario | Typical Clearance Duration |
|---|---|
All documents complete, no discrepancies | 1–3 days |
Minor issues (e.g. photocopy missing, name typo) | 3–5 days |
Fee payment not yet recorded in system | 3–7 days (depends on bank processing) |
Missing original certificate (e.g. WAEC not collected) | 1–3 weeks (need to get certificate first) |
JAMB record discrepancy requiring JAMB correction | 2–4 weeks |
The single most effective way to speed up clearance is to arrive with every document — originals and certified copies — fully prepared. Students who arrive missing even one document typically lose several days going back and forth.
Clearance Fees: What Will You Pay?
In addition to acceptance fees and school fees, students typically encounter several smaller fees during clearance. These include:
- Library registration fee: ₦500 to ₦2,000
- Student identity card fee: ₦1,000 to ₦5,000
- Medical screening fee: ₦500 to ₦3,000
- Departmental clearance fee: ₦1,000 to ₦5,000 (varies by faculty)
- Matriculation gown/robe fee: ₦2,000 to ₦10,000 (paid before matriculation ceremony)
Budget between ₦10,000 and ₦30,000 for miscellaneous clearance fees on top of your main school fees. Having this cash available in small denominations saves time at offices that do not accept transfers for small payments.
Common Mistakes That Delay University Clearance
These are the most frequent errors that cause clearance delays for fresh students in Nigerian universities:
1. Not Having Original Certificates
Photocopies alone are never accepted. Every clearance office requires originals. If your WAEC certificate has not yet been collected from your school, prioritise collecting it — most clearance offices will not proceed without the physical WAEC or NECO certificate. Some universities allow a certified copy from an official results verification body as a temporary measure, but this must be arranged in advance.
2. Name Discrepancies Across Documents
If your name appears differently on your JAMB record, birth certificate, WAEC result and LGA certificate — for example “Adebayo” on one and “Adebayoh” on another — clearance will be put on hold until you produce an affidavit of name correction from a magistrate court. Prepare this before arriving if any of your documents have spelling variations.
3. School Fees Payment Not Reflected in System
Even when payment has been made successfully, it can take 24 to 72 hours to reflect in the university’s system — especially for bank-branch payments. Always keep your teller receipt and Remita confirmation number and report to the Bursary immediately if payment is not showing after 48 hours.
4. Insufficient Passport Photographs
Students consistently underestimate how many passport photographs clearance requires. Between the Admissions Office, Medical Centre, Library, Student Affairs, Department and ID card printing, you may need 20 to 30 photographs. Print them in bulk before arriving — it is far cheaper and faster than getting them printed on campus.
5. Missing the JAMB CAPS Acceptance Step
The Admissions Office will check that your CAPS status shows “Accepted” before proceeding. If you have not yet accepted your admission on JAMB CAPS, clearance cannot begin. Complete the JAMB CAPS acceptance step before travelling to campus for clearance.
Online Clearance: Do Any Nigerian Universities Clear Students Digitally?
A growing number of Nigerian universities have introduced online or hybrid clearance systems, particularly since 2021. Universities like UNILAG, UI and Covenant University now allow students to upload documents through the student portal before arriving on campus, reducing the time spent at physical offices. However, most institutions still require physical presence for at least part of the process — particularly for identity verification, medical screening and document originals check.
Check your specific university’s student portal for any online pre-clearance steps. Completing these steps before arrival can save you one to two full days during the physical clearance process.
What Happens After Clearance? The Matriculation Ceremony
After receiving your matriculation number from the Registry, you become a fully enrolled student. The next milestone is the matriculation ceremony — a formal induction event in which you take an oath of allegiance to the university and are officially welcomed into the academic community. Matriculation usually takes place weeks or months after clearance, once a critical mass of students has been enrolled.
At matriculation you will need your student ID card, a matriculation robe (hired from the university) and the presence of a parent or guardian at many institutions. The matriculation date is announced on the student portal and through official university communication channels — check regularly so you do not miss it.
After matriculation, you are eligible to register for courses on the student portal and commence lectures. Reading our guide on student accommodation in Nigerian universities will help you settle in comfortably once you begin lectures.
University Clearance for Direct Entry Students
Direct Entry (DE) students — those entering at 200 level with A’Level results, OND, HND or a prior degree — follow essentially the same clearance process as UTME students. The differences are:
- Your JAMB Direct Entry registration slip replaces the UTME result slip as your JAMB document.
- You will need to present your A’Level certificate, OND or HND transcript (or equivalent DE qualification) in addition to O’Level results.
- The Admissions Office will verify your DE qualification against the course requirements — bring official transcripts from your previous institution, not just results slips.
- If you held a prior degree or HND, the faculty may require you to attend an interview or equivalence assessment before approving your clearance.
Clearance for Transfer Students
Students transferring from one Nigerian university to another face additional requirements during clearance:
- An official transfer letter or acceptance letter from the receiving university.
- Academic transcripts from the sending institution, officially sealed and signed by the Registrar.
- A clearance letter from the sending university confirming you owe no outstanding fees or liabilities.
- Proof that your JAMB admission was processed through the appropriate channel for the receiving institution.
Transfer clearances typically take longer than fresh student clearances due to the cross-institutional verification required. Allow at least two to three weeks and follow up proactively with both institutions’ Registry offices.
Frequently Asked Questions: University Clearance Process Nigeria 2026
Q1: Can I attend lectures before completing clearance?
Technically, most universities discourage or prohibit this — you are not an officially enrolled student until clearance is complete and your matriculation number is issued. In practice, some lecturers allow students still in the clearance process to sit in on lectures. However, you cannot register for courses or be listed on examination attendance sheets until clearance is finalised. Prioritise clearance before attending any classes.
Q2: What happens if I fail the medical screening during clearance?
A failed medical screening does not automatically mean your admission is revoked. The medical team will document the issue and may refer you to a specialist or request additional tests. Some conditions — such as an infectious disease that requires treatment — may result in deferral of enrollment until the condition is managed. The university’s medical team makes this determination case by case. Most common conditions (e.g. mild anaemia, corrected vision issues, managed chronic conditions) do not affect enrollment.
Q3: I lost my WAEC original certificate before clearance — what can I do?
Contact WAEC directly to apply for a replacement certificate. WAEC accepts applications for replacement certificates at any of its state offices. The process takes two to four weeks. In the interim, obtain a WAEC result verification print (available through the WAEC verification portal) and present it to the Admissions Office with a sworn affidavit explaining the loss. Many universities accept this temporarily while you process the replacement.
Q4: Is the clearance process the same at private and public universities?
The core documents required are the same. However, private universities — particularly Covenant University, Babcock and Bowen — often have more streamlined, faster clearance processes due to smaller student populations and better-organised administrative systems. Federal and state universities with large enrolments (UNILAG, ABU, UNN) typically have longer queues and can take more days to process. The fundamental steps remain identical across all institutions.
Q5: Can someone else complete clearance on my behalf?
No. Clearance is a personal process that requires your physical presence for identity verification, biometric capture (at many universities), medical examination and in some cases an oath of allegiance. You cannot delegate it to a parent, guardian or third party. Plan to be present on campus for the full duration of the clearance period.
Q6: What is the difference between clearance and Post-UTME screening?
Post-UTME screening takes place before admission is finalised — it is the process by which the university confirms your JAMB score, verifies your O’Level results and (at some institutions) administers an additional aptitude test. Clearance takes place after admission is confirmed on JAMB CAPS, acceptance fee is paid and school fees are paid. They are separate processes: screening happens before you are admitted; clearance happens after.
Clearance Survival Tips: Making the Process as Easy as Possible
- Start early: Do not wait until the last week of the clearance window. Offices have shorter queues in the first week of clearance season. Arrive on campus as soon as the clearance date is announced.
- Bring more than you think you need: Print extra copies of every document. The cost of extra photocopies (₦20 to ₦50 each) is trivial compared to the time lost going back for missing copies.
- Carry a folder: Organise all documents in a clearly labelled folder divided by office. This saves time when you are standing at a counter trying to find the right document.
- Know the layout of the campus in advance: Download or request a campus map before arriving so you know where each clearance office is located. Wandering the campus looking for offices wastes hours.
- Follow up assertively: If a department says it will contact you in two days, follow up after two days. Administrative offices at large Nigerian universities are understaffed and proactive follow-up is essential.
Conclusion: Be Prepared, Move Fast
The university clearance process in Nigeria 2026 is manageable if you approach it systematically. Prepare every document before you travel to campus. Accept your admission on JAMB CAPS, pay your university acceptance fee and school fees before clearance begins. Arrive early in the clearance window, carry originals and certified copies of everything, and follow up daily until every office has signed your form.
Once clearance is done, your matriculation number puts you officially on record as a student. From that point, your academic career begins in earnest. Welcome to Nigerian university life — now go and make the most of it.
📌 Still preparing your documents? Read our guides on checking your JAMB CAPS admission status, paying university acceptance fees and finding student accommodation near your campus to complete your arrival checklist.