By Shafii Sani Mohammed
When the Saudi Ministry of Hajj and Umrah unveiled the official schedule for the 2026 Hajj season (1447 AH), National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) took it as a guide for worldwide Hajj planning with clarity, structure, it offered a chance for countries to get it right.
This schedule is the Saudi Ministry of Hajj and Umrah’s global operational calendar. For NAHCON, it is more than a domestic policy document it is a framework that aligns Nigeria with international best practices and expectations.
And now, the ball is firmly in our court.
The timeline released by Saudi Ministry of Hajj and Umrah and streamlined by NAHCON outlines seven critical phases from awareness campaigns and early contract signings to the final airlifts in April 2026. These phases are not just bureaucratic steps; they are pressure points where any delay can spiral into problems that affect thousands of pilgrims.
Each phase carries weight. Each date is a promise. And this time, we must keep that promise.
If there is one thing this writer has learned from years of observing Nigeria’s Hajj operations, it is this: timing is everything. Early preparation does not just make the job easier it directly improves the pilgrim experience.
When we pay early:
• We get hotels closer to the Haram a big relief for elderly and physically challenged pilgrims.
• We secure better-quality tents in Mina, especially those located nearer to the Jamrat.
• We lock in quality transport and catering services in good time and at better prices.
• We avoid panic-induced decisions and service compromises that often result from last-minute arrangements.
Simply put, early planning means a more dignified, more peaceful pilgrimage.
One does not need to look far to understand the consequences of delay. The 2025 Hajj season taught a painful lesson. Many Nigerian pilgrims despite paying were unable to travel because the Saudi visa portal was abruptly closed when the final extension elapsed. No grace period. No manual overrides.
It was heartbreaking to see people who had dreamed of Hajj for years turned away by a deadline we could have met — if only we had acted earlier.
This is no longer just a policy issue it is a human one.
The Hajj Savings Scheme:
Thankfully, pilgrims now have a structured and accessible way to begin their Hajj journey through the Hajj Savings Scheme a shari’ah-compliant platform supervised by NAHCON.
You can open a Hajj Savings account with any of the following partner banks:
• Jaiz Bank
• Lotus Bank
• Taj Bank
• Alternative Bank
Alternatively, pilgrims can also start the process through their respective State Pilgrims Welfare Boards, many of which are now fully integrated with the scheme.
It’s not just about convenience it’s about empowering pilgrims to spread out the cost, reduce stress, and stay ahead of deadlines.
Hajj is not tourism. It is one of Islam’s five pillars a journey of sacrifice, devotion, and deep personal meaning. Many of our pilgrims save for decades to make this once-in-a-lifetime journey. The least we can do as stakeholders is ensure their path is not hindered by our inefficiency or procrastination.
We can’t afford business as usual. Not anymore.
Complying with this schedule isn’t just about meeting deadlines. It opens the door to real, tangible benefits:
• Access to premium accommodation near the holy sites
• Improved tent placement in Mina
• Streamlined visa and travel processing
• Lower costs due to timely bookings
• More time for pilgrim education and orientation
More than that, it sends a powerful message that Nigeria can get it right that our system, when followed, works.
The road to the 2026 Hajj has already begun. We have the dates. We have the banks. We have the platforms. All that remains is our collective will to act — now, not later.
If we work together NAHCON, state boards, tour operators, and the pilgrims themselves we can avoid the chaos of the past and deliver a Hajj experience that reflects the true values of Islam: order, respect, compassion, and excellence.
Because Hajj is not just a journey of the body it is a journey of the soul. And every soul deserves a pilgrimage that is peaceful, purposeful, and properly planned.