For many Nigerians, accessing government information can often feel like navigating a maze.
A business owner searching for licensing details, a student trying to verify a federal programme, or a market trader looking for information on public services may spend hours jumping between websites, offices, and unofficial sources before finding reliable answers. In rural communities and underserved areas, language barriers and limited digital literacy have only widened that gap.
Now, Nigeria is utilizing artificial intelligence to change that experience.
This week, the Federal Government unveiled GovGuideNigeria, an AI-powered platform built to simplify how citizens interact with public institutions and access government services. The initiative, announced by the Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Dr. Bosun Tijani, signals another step in the country’s growing push to position technology as a practical tool for inclusion and governance.
Accessible through both WhatsApp and the web, GovGuideNigeria was created with everyday usability in mind. Rather than forcing users to navigate complicated portals or bureaucratic processes, the platform is designed to provide direct access to information from more than 35 federal ministries and over 60 government agencies through conversational AI.
In a country where millions communicate primarily in indigenous languages, GovGuideNigeria is available in English, Hausa, Igbo, and Yoruba, a deliberate attempt to ensure wider accessibility across diverse communities.
“Today, we launched GovGuideNigeria, an AI-powered platform designed to make access to government information simpler, faster, and more inclusive for every Nigerian,” Tijani said while announcing the initiative.
Nigeria’s technology leadership increasingly sees artificial intelligence as a strategic tool capable of improving public service delivery, strengthening citizen engagement, and expanding access to information at scale.
For underserved and low-literacy populations, officials believe platforms like GovGuideNigeria could become especially transformative. In many communities, access to official information is often filtered through intermediaries, fragmented communication channels, or unreliable online sources. By simplifying access and reducing language barriers, the government hopes the new platform can help close longstanding information gaps.
GovGuideNigeria was developed through collaboration between the National Centre for AI and Robotics (NCAIR), Meta, and Publica. According to Tijani, the initiative demonstrates what can happen when public institutions, private technology players, and local innovators work together to solve real-world challenges.
“I appreciate the strong collaboration between NCAIR, Meta, and Publica in bringing this important initiative to life,” the Minister stated.
The unveiling of GovGuideNigeria did not emerge in isolation as it builds on a series of AI-focused initiatives that have positioned Nigeria among the more ambitious digital economies on the continent.
Two years ago, the Ministry launched Nigeria’s first multilingual Large Language Model known as N-ATLAS. The project was designed not only as an AI system, but as an effort to preserve and digitise Nigeria’s rich linguistic heritage while creating datasets capable of powering inclusive AI solutions.
N-ATLAS was developed through partnerships involving Nigerian AI company Awarritech, global technology organisation DataDotOrg, NITDA, and NCAIR, laying part of the groundwork for the country’s expanding AI ecosystem.
At the policy level, Nigeria has also intensified conversations around responsible AI governance. Authorities recently disclosed that they are co-creating an AI governance framework alongside innovators, startups, and industry stakeholders to guide the ethical and inclusive growth of the technology.
At the same time, investments in digital infrastructure, public sector reform, and technology-driven governance continue to gain momentum under the Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy.
Taken together, these efforts point to a larger vision: a Nigeria where emerging technologies are not reserved for elite sectors alone, but are integrated into the daily realities of citizens.
For a country with one of Africa’s youngest and most digitally active populations, the stakes are high. Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping economies, industries, and public systems around the world. The challenge for many developing nations is not simply whether they will adopt AI, but whether they can shape it around local needs, languages, and realities.
With GovGuideNigeria, Nigeria appears determined to ensure that its AI journey is not only about innovation, but about accessibility, inclusion, and practical value for millions of people who interact with government every day.