Why Is Nigeria’s Premier Music Award Allergic to Nigeria?

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The 18th edition of The Headies is going to Toronto. The announcement was made on June 15, 2026, at the Grand Ballroom of Eko Hotel in Lagos - which is, ironically, in Nigeria. The ceremony itself will not be. Nigerian fans who want to attend Nigeria’s premier music award will need a visa, a flight, and a hotel room in Canada. Everyone else gets a watch party.

The Headies have earned that weight over twenty years. Established in 2006 as the Hip Hop World Awards, the ceremony has hosted some of Nigerian music’s most unforgettable nights. Olamide remains the most decorated artist in its history with 15 wins. Wizkid, Davido, Burna Boy, Rema, Ayra Starr, Tems and Simi have all built portions of their legacy on that stage - the same artists now filling arenas across Europe and North America, the same artists Canada’s Deputy High Commissioner would later cite as evidence of Nigerian music’s global reach. Wande Coal’s sweep at the 5th edition - Album of the Year, Artist of the Year, R&B Album of the Year, and Hip Hop Revelation of the Year in a single night - is still talked about. The 2015 clash between Olamide and Don Jazzy over the Next Rated category split the internet for weeks. In 2025, Qing Madi became the youngest female artist to win Best Songwriter, accepting the award in tears, dedicating it to her mother watching from home. The same edition carried a posthumous tribute to Mohbad, whose loss in 2023 still sits heavy over an industry that never got to see him fully embraced while he was alive. These are not small footnotes. They are the moments that turned an awards show into a cultural institution - one built, performance by performance, winner by winner, entirely on Nigerian soil.

This is the third time in four editions that ceremony has left that soil. The awards moved to Atlanta in 2022 for two consecutive editions before returning to Lagos in 2025 under the theme “Back to Base.” They are not at base anymore.

Founder Ayo Animashaun cited economics as the primary reason. He drew a direct comparison to the Grammy Awards: “Most of the awards in the world that you see that are big, they have four or five sources of revenue. Here we have only one, everybody talks about sponsorship.” The funding problem is real. The proposed solution is not the right fix.

The Grammys stay in Los Angeles for a specific reason. Animashaun acknowledged this himself: “Grammy left Los Angeles and went to Madison Square in New York because LA was shut down. LA fought to bring Grammy back because it does something to their economy and it is part of their DNA.” That comparison undermines his own decision. Los Angeles understood that the Grammys belonged to the city. The city built the financial relationship that made losing the event unthinkable. Nigeria has not had that conversation yet. The Headies are boarding a flight instead.

The economic argument actually strengthens the case against the decision. A platform that cannot sustain itself financially in Nigeria has an infrastructure problem. Geography does not solve an infrastructure problem. Going to Toronto relocates the funding gap temporarily. The structural issue remains untouched. The same conversation will likely happen again next year, or the year after.

Animashaun also pointed to Nigeria’s large diaspora community in Canada as motivation for the move. That ambition is legitimate on its own terms. Taking Nigerian music to the world and taking Nigerian music away from Nigerians are not the same decision. The Headies has been making the second one while describing it as the first. The Nigerian diaspora in Toronto did not build The Headies. Nigerian fans, Nigerian artists, and the Nigerian industry did - across twenty years, fifteen wins for Olamide, a tearful debut win for Qing Madi, a posthumous tribute for Mohbad. Taking the award abroad to reach a diaspora audience, while the home audience receives a livestream, reads less like expansion. It reads like a concession dressed as strategy.

Canada’s Deputy High Commissioner Carlos Rojas-Arbulu welcomed the decision warmly, noting that Wizkid, Davido, Burna Boy, Olamide, Reekado Banks, Shallipopi, Asake and Ayra Starr had all visited Canada in the past eight months. Nigerian artists touring Canada is not evidence that The Headies belong there. Nigerian artists tour London, Paris, and New York with similar frequency. The Grammys are not hosted in any of those cities either.

Animashaun’s real question should not be which international city offers the most convenient venue. It should be why Nigeria has not made The Headies part of its economic and cultural identity the way Los Angeles did with the Grammys. That conversation belongs with the Lagos State Government, with Nigerian banks, with local corporate sponsors, with the Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture. It is a harder conversation than announcing a Toronto venue from a ballroom in Lagos. It is also the only conversation that solves the actual problem.

The decision has already sparked debate among entertainment followers, many questioning why a Nigerian music award platform keeps relocating outside the country. Those questions deserve answers. An award that repeatedly leaves its home country has failed to convince that country it is worth investing in. The case for keeping The Headies in Nigeria has never needed sentiment. It only ever needed money.

Credit:The Headies Award 18th Edition

Why Is Nigeria’s Premier Music Award Allergic to Nigeria?

Authored by
This is some text inside of a div block.

The 18th edition of The Headies is going to Toronto. The announcement was made on June 15, 2026, at the Grand Ballroom of Eko Hotel in Lagos - which is, ironically, in Nigeria. The ceremony itself will not be. Nigerian fans who want to attend Nigeria’s premier music award will need a visa, a flight, and a hotel room in Canada. Everyone else gets a watch party.

The Headies have earned that weight over twenty years. Established in 2006 as the Hip Hop World Awards, the ceremony has hosted some of Nigerian music’s most unforgettable nights. Olamide remains the most decorated artist in its history with 15 wins. Wizkid, Davido, Burna Boy, Rema, Ayra Starr, Tems and Simi have all built portions of their legacy on that stage - the same artists now filling arenas across Europe and North America, the same artists Canada’s Deputy High Commissioner would later cite as evidence of Nigerian music’s global reach. Wande Coal’s sweep at the 5th edition - Album of the Year, Artist of the Year, R&B Album of the Year, and Hip Hop Revelation of the Year in a single night - is still talked about. The 2015 clash between Olamide and Don Jazzy over the Next Rated category split the internet for weeks. In 2025, Qing Madi became the youngest female artist to win Best Songwriter, accepting the award in tears, dedicating it to her mother watching from home. The same edition carried a posthumous tribute to Mohbad, whose loss in 2023 still sits heavy over an industry that never got to see him fully embraced while he was alive. These are not small footnotes. They are the moments that turned an awards show into a cultural institution - one built, performance by performance, winner by winner, entirely on Nigerian soil.

This is the third time in four editions that ceremony has left that soil. The awards moved to Atlanta in 2022 for two consecutive editions before returning to Lagos in 2025 under the theme “Back to Base.” They are not at base anymore.

Founder Ayo Animashaun cited economics as the primary reason. He drew a direct comparison to the Grammy Awards: “Most of the awards in the world that you see that are big, they have four or five sources of revenue. Here we have only one, everybody talks about sponsorship.” The funding problem is real. The proposed solution is not the right fix.

The Grammys stay in Los Angeles for a specific reason. Animashaun acknowledged this himself: “Grammy left Los Angeles and went to Madison Square in New York because LA was shut down. LA fought to bring Grammy back because it does something to their economy and it is part of their DNA.” That comparison undermines his own decision. Los Angeles understood that the Grammys belonged to the city. The city built the financial relationship that made losing the event unthinkable. Nigeria has not had that conversation yet. The Headies are boarding a flight instead.

The economic argument actually strengthens the case against the decision. A platform that cannot sustain itself financially in Nigeria has an infrastructure problem. Geography does not solve an infrastructure problem. Going to Toronto relocates the funding gap temporarily. The structural issue remains untouched. The same conversation will likely happen again next year, or the year after.

Animashaun also pointed to Nigeria’s large diaspora community in Canada as motivation for the move. That ambition is legitimate on its own terms. Taking Nigerian music to the world and taking Nigerian music away from Nigerians are not the same decision. The Headies has been making the second one while describing it as the first. The Nigerian diaspora in Toronto did not build The Headies. Nigerian fans, Nigerian artists, and the Nigerian industry did - across twenty years, fifteen wins for Olamide, a tearful debut win for Qing Madi, a posthumous tribute for Mohbad. Taking the award abroad to reach a diaspora audience, while the home audience receives a livestream, reads less like expansion. It reads like a concession dressed as strategy.

Canada’s Deputy High Commissioner Carlos Rojas-Arbulu welcomed the decision warmly, noting that Wizkid, Davido, Burna Boy, Olamide, Reekado Banks, Shallipopi, Asake and Ayra Starr had all visited Canada in the past eight months. Nigerian artists touring Canada is not evidence that The Headies belong there. Nigerian artists tour London, Paris, and New York with similar frequency. The Grammys are not hosted in any of those cities either.

Animashaun’s real question should not be which international city offers the most convenient venue. It should be why Nigeria has not made The Headies part of its economic and cultural identity the way Los Angeles did with the Grammys. That conversation belongs with the Lagos State Government, with Nigerian banks, with local corporate sponsors, with the Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture. It is a harder conversation than announcing a Toronto venue from a ballroom in Lagos. It is also the only conversation that solves the actual problem.

The decision has already sparked debate among entertainment followers, many questioning why a Nigerian music award platform keeps relocating outside the country. Those questions deserve answers. An award that repeatedly leaves its home country has failed to convince that country it is worth investing in. The case for keeping The Headies in Nigeria has never needed sentiment. It only ever needed money.

Credit:The Headies Award 18th Edition

This is some text inside of a div block.

Why Is Nigeria’s Premier Music Award Allergic to Nigeria?

Authored by

The 18th edition of The Headies is going to Toronto. The announcement was made on June 15, 2026, at the Grand Ballroom of Eko Hotel in Lagos - which is, ironically, in Nigeria. The ceremony itself will not be. Nigerian fans who want to attend Nigeria’s premier music award will need a visa, a flight, and a hotel room in Canada. Everyone else gets a watch party.

The Headies have earned that weight over twenty years. Established in 2006 as the Hip Hop World Awards, the ceremony has hosted some of Nigerian music’s most unforgettable nights. Olamide remains the most decorated artist in its history with 15 wins. Wizkid, Davido, Burna Boy, Rema, Ayra Starr, Tems and Simi have all built portions of their legacy on that stage - the same artists now filling arenas across Europe and North America, the same artists Canada’s Deputy High Commissioner would later cite as evidence of Nigerian music’s global reach. Wande Coal’s sweep at the 5th edition - Album of the Year, Artist of the Year, R&B Album of the Year, and Hip Hop Revelation of the Year in a single night - is still talked about. The 2015 clash between Olamide and Don Jazzy over the Next Rated category split the internet for weeks. In 2025, Qing Madi became the youngest female artist to win Best Songwriter, accepting the award in tears, dedicating it to her mother watching from home. The same edition carried a posthumous tribute to Mohbad, whose loss in 2023 still sits heavy over an industry that never got to see him fully embraced while he was alive. These are not small footnotes. They are the moments that turned an awards show into a cultural institution - one built, performance by performance, winner by winner, entirely on Nigerian soil.

This is the third time in four editions that ceremony has left that soil. The awards moved to Atlanta in 2022 for two consecutive editions before returning to Lagos in 2025 under the theme “Back to Base.” They are not at base anymore.

Founder Ayo Animashaun cited economics as the primary reason. He drew a direct comparison to the Grammy Awards: “Most of the awards in the world that you see that are big, they have four or five sources of revenue. Here we have only one, everybody talks about sponsorship.” The funding problem is real. The proposed solution is not the right fix.

The Grammys stay in Los Angeles for a specific reason. Animashaun acknowledged this himself: “Grammy left Los Angeles and went to Madison Square in New York because LA was shut down. LA fought to bring Grammy back because it does something to their economy and it is part of their DNA.” That comparison undermines his own decision. Los Angeles understood that the Grammys belonged to the city. The city built the financial relationship that made losing the event unthinkable. Nigeria has not had that conversation yet. The Headies are boarding a flight instead.

The economic argument actually strengthens the case against the decision. A platform that cannot sustain itself financially in Nigeria has an infrastructure problem. Geography does not solve an infrastructure problem. Going to Toronto relocates the funding gap temporarily. The structural issue remains untouched. The same conversation will likely happen again next year, or the year after.

Animashaun also pointed to Nigeria’s large diaspora community in Canada as motivation for the move. That ambition is legitimate on its own terms. Taking Nigerian music to the world and taking Nigerian music away from Nigerians are not the same decision. The Headies has been making the second one while describing it as the first. The Nigerian diaspora in Toronto did not build The Headies. Nigerian fans, Nigerian artists, and the Nigerian industry did - across twenty years, fifteen wins for Olamide, a tearful debut win for Qing Madi, a posthumous tribute for Mohbad. Taking the award abroad to reach a diaspora audience, while the home audience receives a livestream, reads less like expansion. It reads like a concession dressed as strategy.

Canada’s Deputy High Commissioner Carlos Rojas-Arbulu welcomed the decision warmly, noting that Wizkid, Davido, Burna Boy, Olamide, Reekado Banks, Shallipopi, Asake and Ayra Starr had all visited Canada in the past eight months. Nigerian artists touring Canada is not evidence that The Headies belong there. Nigerian artists tour London, Paris, and New York with similar frequency. The Grammys are not hosted in any of those cities either.

Animashaun’s real question should not be which international city offers the most convenient venue. It should be why Nigeria has not made The Headies part of its economic and cultural identity the way Los Angeles did with the Grammys. That conversation belongs with the Lagos State Government, with Nigerian banks, with local corporate sponsors, with the Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture. It is a harder conversation than announcing a Toronto venue from a ballroom in Lagos. It is also the only conversation that solves the actual problem.

The decision has already sparked debate among entertainment followers, many questioning why a Nigerian music award platform keeps relocating outside the country. Those questions deserve answers. An award that repeatedly leaves its home country has failed to convince that country it is worth investing in. The case for keeping The Headies in Nigeria has never needed sentiment. It only ever needed money.

Credit:The Headies Award 18th Edition

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