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TV Stand Prices in Nigeria 2026
TV stand and TV console prices in Nigeria range from ₦25,000 for a basic Jiji-grade compact stand to ₦7,400,000+ for a luxury full-wall entertainment unit, with most Nigerian households spending between ₦80,000 and ₦500,000 on a finished, ready-to-deliver piece. This page breaks down the full Nigerian TV stand market for 2026 — the four price tiers we manufacture at Vento Furniture, how they compare to Jumia, Jiji, Fouani, DecorhubNG and HOG Furniture pricing, and which tier actually fits your TV, your room and your budget.
All Vento prices below are current retail in Nigerian naira, every model listed is in stock or on short lead time, and every tier is available with free Lagos delivery and monthly instalment plans. We manufacture in Turkey and ship directly to our Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt showrooms — which is why our mid-range and premium pricing tends to sit below equivalent European imports at the same quality grade.
Nigerian TV Stand Market Overview (2026)
Before looking at any specific brand, it helps to understand the full Nigerian TV stand price range and where each segment sits. The market splits into four clear bands by manufacturing origin and finish grade:
| Market Segment | Typical Price Range | Where You Find It | What You Get |
|---|---|---|---|
| Used & Local Market | ₦25,000 – ₦80,000 | Jiji used listings, open markets | Particleboard, no warranty, self-collect |
| Budget Imported & Marketplace | ₦40,000 – ₦220,000 | Jumia, DecorhubNG, Jiji new | MDF, LED-floor stands, basic delivery |
| Mid-Tier Brand Retail | ₦300,000 – ₦900,000 | Fouani, HOG, Vento Budget Compact | Solid frame, warranty, city delivery |
| Premium & Luxury | ₦1,000,000 – ₦7,400,000+ | Vento Mid-Range to Luxury, custom carpenters | Factory finish, multi-year warranty, assembly |
Why such a wide gap? A ₦25,000 used console from Jiji and a ₦7,400,000 Valentino Ret entertainment unit are not the same product class. The cheapest options are particleboard with thin veneer, sold as-is with no delivery or warranty. The premium end is solid-frame Turkish manufacturing with full assembly, multi-year warranty and finish grades you can stand next to a luxury sofa set without looking outclassed. The right price for you depends on how long the piece needs to last, how the TV wall is used, and what the rest of the room looks like.
Quick Vento TV Stand & Console Price Reference (Nigeria, 2026)
| Segment | Price Range | Typical Screen Size | Representative Vento Models |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget Compact | ₦520,000 – ₦900,000 | 32″ – 55″ | Lovisa, Soffice |
| Modern Mid-Range | ₦1,000,000 – ₦2,000,000 | 55″ – 70″ | Rolex, Zelve, Lucenta |
| Premium Consoles & Wall Units | ₦3,000,000 – ₦5,000,000 | 65″ – 75″ | Armin, Harmony, Natura Ser, Voyance, Lucca Ser |
| Luxury Entertainment Units | ₦5,000,000 – ₦7,400,000+ | 75″+ | San Marino, Valentino Ret |
How Vento compares to common Nigerian retailers: A Jumia LED floor stand at ₦42,990 and a Vento Lovisa at ₦520,170 are not competing products — they target different buyers. Jumia/Jiji budget stands suit rentals, second homes and 40-inch TVs where the piece is functional, not styled. Vento targets the buyer who wants the TV wall to coordinate with the sofa and dining set, holds a 55-inch+ screen, and lasts a decade. The price gap reflects different material specifications, not different margins on the same product.
TV Stand vs TV Console vs Entertainment Unit — What’s the Difference?
These three terms are often used interchangeably in Nigerian listings, but they describe different furniture types and the difference matters when you are comparing prices.
TV Stand. A simple, open-shelf design focused only on holding the television. Usually narrower (1.0 – 1.4 metres), with one or two shallow open shelves and minimal closed storage. Cheapest format. Best for bedrooms, rentals, or any space where you do not need to hide cable boxes and game consoles. In the Vento range, the Lovisa is closest to a traditional TV stand layout.
TV Console. A long, low cabinet that always includes enclosed storage — doors, drawers or a combination — alongside the surface for the TV. Wider than a stand (1.6 – 2.2 metres), with more depth, and hardware specified for daily use (soft-close drawers, integrated cable channels). Most Vento mid-range pieces — Rolex, Zelve — sit in this category. This is what most Nigerian households think of as a “TV stand” in 2026.
Entertainment Unit / Wall Unit. A full-wall installation that combines display shelving, closed cabinet banks and sometimes integrated lighting or wall-mounted panels. Typically 2.2 – 3.0+ metres wide. Designed to be the dominant visual feature of the room. Vento premium and luxury pieces — Harmony, San Marino, Valentino Ret — fall into this class.
When you see a Jiji listing for ₦95,000 advertised as a “TV console”, it is almost always a basic open-shelf stand by this definition. A real TV console with enclosed storage and finished hardware starts around ₦300,000 in the Nigerian retail market and runs into the millions for a true entertainment unit.
Budget Compact TV Stands — ₦520,000 to ₦900,000
What this tier covers
The Vento budget compact tier is built for bedrooms, guest rooms, second sitting rooms and smaller flats where a full wall unit would overwhelm the space. Pieces in this segment sit under 1.4 metres wide, support televisions from 32 inches up to 55 inches, and still offer two to three drawers or compartments for remotes, cables and media accessories.
The Lovisa TV Stand at ₦520,170 is the entry point into the Vento range and the cheapest TV stand we sell while still meeting our construction and finish standards. It comes with two drawers, an open centre display shelf, and supports screens up to 55 inches. The Soffice TV Stand at ₦850,170 is the natural upgrade: slightly larger footprint, closed cabinet storage on both sides, and a weight capacity rated for 65-inch screens.
Choose this tier if: you are furnishing a bedroom, a rental unit, a second home, or a small living room; the TV is 55 inches or smaller; and you want a finished piece from a manufacturer rather than a market-grade console.
Modern Mid-Range TV Consoles — ₦1,000,000 to ₦2,000,000
What this tier covers
The modern mid-range is the most popular price band at Vento and accounts for the highest share of TV console sales in our Lagos showroom. Pieces sit between 1.6 and 2.2 metres wide, handle televisions up to 70 inches, and combine open display shelving with closed cabinet storage for the cable box, sound bar, games console and router.
The Rolex TV Stand at ₦1,800,170 is the single most-requested piece in this tier — clean lines, matte finish, integrated cable management channels, and enough top-surface width for a 70-inch screen and a sound bar up to 120 cm. The Zelve TV Stand at ₦1,990,000 is its closest alternative for customers who prefer a warmer wood tone over the matte finish. The Lucenta sits at the lower end of this tier for buyers who want modern styling but are working to a ₦1M – ₦1.3M budget.
Choose this tier if: your TV is between 55 and 70 inches; the living room is your primary viewing space; and you want a console that balances display and storage without taking over the full wall.
Premium Consoles and Wall Units — ₦3,000,000 to ₦5,000,000
What this tier covers
Premium Vento wall units are designed for dedicated living rooms or family rooms where the TV wall is a styling feature, not just a functional corner. Pieces in this segment include open display sections, multiple closed compartments, and a finish grade (lacquer depth, edge detailing, hardware) that is noticeably above the mid-range.
The Armin TV Unit at ₦3,310,170 is an entertainment-unit layout — wider than a console, with multi-compartment storage, integrated cable channels and enough top-surface depth for larger sound bars. The Harmony wall unit at ₦4,000,170 is the most popular premium wall unit — full wall proportions, combined open display and closed storage, rated for flat screens up to 75 inches. Natura Ser, Voyance and Lucca Ser round out the tier with variations in finish and storage layout.
Choose this tier if: your TV is 65 inches or larger; you want the wall unit to act as a styling anchor for the room; and you are willing to spend on finish quality and storage configuration rather than on sheer size.
Luxury Entertainment Units — ₦5,000,000 and Above
What this tier covers
The Vento luxury tier is built for media rooms, large formal living rooms and full-wall installations where the entertainment unit is intended to be the dominant feature. Pieces run two to three metres wide and include custom storage layouts, premium hardware throughout, and finishes that match our Luxury Collection sofa sets and dining suites.
The San Marino TV Stand at ₦6,000,170 is a full-wall unit with combined display shelving, closed cabinet banks and the finish grade to sit next to a luxury sofa set without looking outclassed. The Valentino Ret entertainment unit at ₦7,400,000 is the top-of-line piece in the category — full-wall proportions, custom storage compartments, and the heaviest hardware specification we produce.
Choose this tier if: you are building or refurbishing a media room or formal living room; the TV is 75 inches or larger; and the room design calls for a coordinated luxury look across sofa, dining and entertainment pieces.
TV Stand Sizing Guide — How Wide Should It Be?
The single most common sizing mistake in Nigerian living rooms is buying a TV stand that is too narrow for the screen. The piece looks top-heavy, the proportions fight the room, and the closed-storage compartments end up overhanging the TV. The fix is a simple width rule.
Width rule: The TV stand surface should be at least 4 to 10 inches wider than the television, measured corner to corner. A 65-inch TV measures roughly 57 inches wide, so the console should be at least 61 inches (155 cm) wide — and 65 to 67 inches (165–170 cm) looks better visually.
| TV Screen Size | Recommended Stand Width | Vento Tier Fit |
|---|---|---|
| 32″ – 43″ | 110 – 130 cm | Budget Compact (Lovisa) |
| 43″ – 55″ | 130 – 160 cm | Budget Compact (Lovisa, Soffice) |
| 55″ – 65″ | 160 – 190 cm | Mid-Range (Rolex, Zelve, Lucenta) |
| 65″ – 75″ | 190 – 230 cm | Premium (Armin, Harmony) |
| 75″+ | 230 cm+ | Luxury (San Marino, Valentino Ret) |
Height rule: The centre of the TV screen should sit between 100 cm and 120 cm above the floor when you are seated on the sofa — roughly at eye level. Most Vento consoles are designed for a 55–60 cm cabinet height, which puts a 55-inch TV centre at 105–110 cm. If you are wall-mounting the TV above a low console, the same eye-level rule applies; do not mount above 130 cm without checking sightlines from the seating position.
What Actually Drives TV Stand Prices in Nigeria
Six factors account for most of the price variation between one Vento TV stand and another. Understanding them helps you judge whether a piece is fairly priced for its segment.
Width and screen rating. A console rated for a 55-inch screen will always price below one rated for 75 inches, because the frame, top surface and load-bearing hardware all scale up. Moving from a 1.2-metre compact to a 2.5-metre wall unit typically triples the material content.
Storage configuration. Open shelving is the cheapest storage format. Drawers with runners cost more. Closed cabinets with hinged doors, soft-close mechanisms and internal shelving cost more again. A wall unit that combines all three — open display, drawers and closed cabinets — sits at the top of its size band.
Finish grade. Melamine and standard laminate are the entry-level finishes. High-gloss lacquer, veneer over solid substrate, and hand-applied detailing move a piece into the premium tier. The finish alone can shift a mid-range console by ₦400,000 – ₦700,000.
Hardware specification. Standard metal handles, basic drawer runners and simple hinges keep costs down. Soft-close hinges, full-extension ball-bearing runners, integrated cable management ports and concealed pulls are premium specifications that add cost on every drawer and door.
Manufacturing origin. Vento manufactures in Turkey and ships to Nigeria under our own logistics chain. This generally prices below equivalent European or imported Italian pieces at the same quality grade, and above local Nigerian particleboard assembly, because the material and labour specification is different in each case.
Included services. Vento pricing includes free Lagos delivery, assembly on delivery in Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt, and a multi-year warranty on frame and hardware. Some cheaper market-grade pieces quote a lower sticker price but do not include any of these services, so the effective cost to have a working TV stand in your living room is closer than the headline price suggests.
TV Stand Materials in Nigeria — Particleboard, MDF, Solid Wood & Veneer
The material specification is the single biggest predictor of how long a TV stand will last in the Nigerian climate. Understanding the four common construction types helps you read prices correctly and avoid paying premium money for budget-grade material.
Particleboard (₦25,000 – ₦150,000). Compressed wood chips bonded with resin, faced with thin paper laminate. The lightest, cheapest format. Common in Jiji and Jumia budget listings. Swells with moisture, holds up two to four years in typical Nigerian living rooms before hinges and surfaces start to fail.
MDF (Medium-Density Fibreboard) (₦150,000 – ₦500,000). Denser than particleboard, takes paint and laminate finishes better, more dimensionally stable. The standard material for mid-range marketplace consoles and the entry tier of brand retailers. Five to eight years of typical use with reasonable handling.
MDF with Solid Wood Frame (₦500,000 – ₦2,000,000). Solid wood for the structural frame (legs, top rails, internal supports), MDF panels for the cabinet sides and back. The standard Vento construction across the Budget Compact and Modern Mid-Range tiers. Combines the dimensional stability of MDF with the load-bearing strength of solid wood. Ten years plus of typical use.
Veneer over Solid Substrate (₦2,000,000+). A thin slice of real hardwood (oak, walnut, ash) bonded to a solid wood or high-density substrate. The finish grade in the Vento Premium and Luxury tiers. Looks and ages like solid hardwood at a fraction of the cost and weight. Lifetime piece with reasonable care.
Reading Nigerian listings: “Wooden TV stand” on Jiji or Jumia almost always means MDF or particleboard with a wood-look laminate, not actual solid wood. Real solid hardwood TV stands in Nigeria start around ₦800,000 — anything cheaper than that calling itself “solid wood” is usually engineered material with a wood finish.
TV Console Design Trends in Nigeria 2026
Nigerian living-room TV walls have shifted noticeably in the past two years. Three design directions account for most of what we are seeing requested in our Lagos and Abuja showrooms.
Matte minimalist consoles. Clean horizontal lines, low profile (40–55 cm tall), matte black or matte off-white finishes, hardware concealed behind push-to-open doors. The look that the Rolex, Zelve and Lucenta target. Best paired with wall-mounted TVs and a simple sound bar — the console sits below the TV as a styling baseline, not as the focal point.
Wood-grain warm tones. Walnut and oak veneer finishes that bring warmth into rooms dominated by neutral sofas and cool wall paint. Strong demand for this look in Ibadan and Abuja, slightly less so in Lagos which still leans matte black. The Zelve and the Lucca Ser premium unit are the most-requested wood-grain pieces in the Vento range.
Full-wall entertainment units with integrated lighting. The premium and luxury tiers — Harmony, San Marino, Valentino Ret — increasingly include LED strip channels for ambient lighting behind shelving or under cabinet edges. The look that turns the TV wall into the dominant feature of a formal living room or media room. Best when the room has enough depth to seat the viewer 2.5+ metres back.
What is moving out of fashion in Nigerian living rooms is the tall, narrow display unit (the “Provincia”-style tower) and the open-shelf-only TV stand without enclosed storage. Both look dated against current matte minimalist lines and create cable-management problems that the integrated channel solutions on newer pieces avoid.
How to Choose the Right Price Tier
Start with the TV itself. A 43-inch to 55-inch screen sits comfortably on a budget compact stand; a 55-inch to 70-inch screen deserves the modern mid-range at minimum; anything 75 inches or larger should sit on a premium wall unit or a luxury entertainment unit, because the proportions of a compact console will make a large TV look top-heavy in the room.
Next, think about the role of the room. A bedroom TV stand is functional — Lovisa or Soffice will do the job indefinitely. A primary living-room TV wall is a daily-use styling feature — the modern mid-range (Rolex, Zelve) is usually where the right balance of cost and presence sits. A dedicated media room or a formal living room in a larger home is where premium and luxury start to earn their place.
Finally, match the TV stand to the rest of the room. A luxury sofa set on a modern mid-range TV stand looks mismatched; a budget compact stand next to a premium dining suite looks under-specified. Most Vento customers coordinate the TV stand tier to the sofa tier — the sofa sets category uses the same four-segment structure (budget, modern, premium, luxury) for exactly this reason.
Alternatives to a Dedicated TV Stand
If a dedicated TV console is not the right answer for your space, three alternatives work well in Nigerian living rooms — each with different trade-offs on price, storage and visual impact.
Sideboard or credenza (₦400,000 – ₦1,800,000). Originally a dining-room piece, increasingly used in living rooms as a stylish TV stand alternative. Taller than a typical TV console (75–90 cm vs 55–60 cm), with deeper storage and a more formal look. Best when the TV is wall-mounted and the cabinet plays a styling role, not a functional one.
Console table (₦200,000 – ₦600,000). A narrow, long table — usually with open legs and no enclosed storage — placed against the wall below a wall-mounted TV. The cheapest format and the smallest visual footprint. Best for small living rooms where storage is handled elsewhere and the TV wall should look light.
Floating wall-mounted unit (₦150,000 – ₦800,000). A cabinet bracketed directly to the wall with no floor contact. Frees up the floor visually, easier to clean around, but limited in storage capacity and load weight. Increasingly popular in Lagos new-build apartments. Best when the wall structure can take the bracket load and the TV is no more than 65 inches.
A floating shelf or a bench can also work in very small spaces, but neither offers the storage or proportions of a dedicated console once the TV is 55 inches or larger.
Instalments and delivery. All four Vento tiers are available on Vento instalment plans, free Lagos delivery applies at every price point, and Abuja and Port Harcourt delivery is charged separately at the quote stage. Bulk orders for room-coordinated purchases (sofa + TV stand + dining) typically qualify for additional discount — request a quote from the relevant product page.
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TV Stand & TV Console Price FAQ (Nigeria)
How much does a TV stand cost in Nigeria in 2026?
TV stands in Nigeria range from ₦25,000 for a basic Jiji-grade used compact stand to ₦7,400,000+ for a luxury full-wall entertainment unit. Most Nigerian households spend between ₦80,000 and ₦500,000 on a ready-to-deliver piece. Brand-retail TV consoles from Fouani, HOG, DecorhubNG and Vento typically start at ₦300,000 – ₦520,000 for a factory-finished compact and run up to ₦2,000,000+ for a premium wall unit.
What is the cheapest TV stand at Vento Furniture?
The Lovisa TV Stand at ₦520,170 is the cheapest TV stand in the Vento range. It supports screens up to 55 inches, comes with two drawers and an open display shelf, and carries the same Turkish-manufacture warranty as higher-priced pieces in the category. Below this price point you are looking at marketplace MDF stands from Jumia or Jiji rather than factory-finished branded furniture.
What is the difference between a TV stand, a TV console and a TV unit?
A TV stand is a simple open-shelf design focused only on holding the television. A TV console is a long, low cabinet that always includes enclosed storage like doors or drawers alongside the TV surface. An entertainment unit or wall unit is a full-wall installation that combines display shelving, closed storage and often integrated lighting. Stands are cheapest, consoles are mid-range and the most common Nigerian living-room piece in 2026, and entertainment units sit at the premium and luxury end.
What is the best size TV stand for a 65-inch television in Nigeria?
For a 65-inch TV, the console surface should be at least 160 cm wide, and 175 – 190 cm looks better visually. The comfortable price range at Vento for a 65-inch screen is ₦1,500,000 to ₦2,500,000 — that covers the upper modern mid-range and the lower premium tier. The Rolex at ₦1,800,170 and Zelve at ₦1,990,000 are the two most common picks at this screen size. For a full wall unit, the Armin at ₦3,310,170 is the entry point into the premium tier.
How much should I budget for a TV stand for a 32 inch or 43 inch TV?
For a 32-inch to 43-inch TV in a bedroom, guest room or rental, the entry-level Vento Budget Compact tier covers the requirement — the Lovisa at ₦520,170 is the most-requested piece in this band. Below ₦500,000 the practical options are Jumia or DecorhubNG MDF stands in the ₦100,000 – ₦300,000 band; these work for short-term use but rarely last beyond three to four years in typical Nigerian living-room conditions.
Why are Vento TV consoles more expensive than Jumia or Jiji prices?
Vento TV stands are factory-finished Turkish-manufactured pieces with solid wood frame construction, multi-year warranty, and included delivery and assembly in Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt. Jumia and Jiji budget listings are typically particleboard or basic MDF consoles with no warranty, no assembly and no included delivery — usually two to four years of expected service life before hinges and surfaces start to fail. The price gap reflects different product specifications, not different margins on the same product.
Do Vento TV stand prices include VAT and delivery?
All prices displayed on Vento product pages are final retail prices in naira with tax included. Lagos delivery is free at every price tier. Abuja, Port Harcourt and other major-city delivery is quoted separately at checkout based on the piece and the destination. Assembly on delivery is included in Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt.
Can I pay for a TV stand in instalments?
Yes. Vento offers instalment plans across all four price tiers — budget compact, modern mid-range, premium and luxury. Plan terms depend on the piece and the deposit structure; the product page or a direct quote request will return the exact monthly figure for a specific stand.
Wooden TV stand or MDF — which is better value in Nigeria?
Real solid hardwood TV stands in Nigeria start around ₦800,000 — most listings cheaper than that describing themselves as “wooden” are MDF or particleboard with a wood-look laminate. The best value in 2026 is a solid wood frame with MDF panels, which is the standard Vento construction across the Budget Compact and Modern Mid-Range tiers. It combines the dimensional stability MDF offers in humid conditions with the load-bearing strength of solid wood, typically delivering ten years plus of service life.
What can I use instead of a TV stand?
Three alternatives work well in Nigerian living rooms: a sideboard or credenza (taller, more formal, ₦400,000 – ₦1,800,000), a narrow console table below a wall-mounted TV (cheapest, lightest visual footprint, ₦200,000 – ₦600,000), or a floating wall-mounted cabinet with no floor contact (modern Lagos new-build look, ₦150,000 – ₦800,000). Each trades storage capacity for visual style — a dedicated TV console remains the most practical choice when the TV is 55 inches or larger and the room is the primary viewing space.
Which Vento TV stand is best value for a primary living room in Lagos?
For a primary living-room TV wall in Lagos with a 55-inch to 70-inch screen, the best-value piece is the Rolex TV Stand at ₦1,800,170. It is the most-requested stand in the mid-range at our Lagos showroom, combines open display shelving with closed cabinet storage, includes integrated cable management, and handles screens up to 70 inches. For customers stepping up to a full wall unit with a 70-inch or 75-inch screen, the Harmony wall unit at ₦4,000,170 is the next step.
Do TV stand prices in Nigeria change with the naira exchange rate?
Vento prices are set in naira and hold for a full quarter at a time. Because manufacturing happens in Turkey and shipping is in foreign currency, the naira retail prices are reviewed every three months and adjusted if the exchange rate has moved materially. Prices listed on this page are current for the 2026 second quarter.
Is it worth buying a luxury TV stand above ₦5,000,000?
A luxury entertainment unit is worth the step up when three conditions are true: the room is a dedicated media room or a formal living room rather than a general family space, the screen is 75 inches or larger so the unit does not look oversized, and the rest of the room (sofa, dining, lighting) is already at a luxury specification. Below that, a premium wall unit at ₦3M to ₦5M typically delivers the same visual impact at lower cost.
