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National Universities Commission Cancels HND-to-B.Sc Conversion Programmes Nationwide: What It Means for HND Holders
National Universities Commission Cancels HND-to-B.Sc Conversion Programmes Nationwide: What It Means for HND Holders

The National Universities Commission (NUC) has directed Nigerian universities to immediately discontinue HND-to-B.Sc conversion and top-up programmes across the country, a decision expected to significantly affect Higher National Diploma (HND) holders seeking degree upgrades.
The directive, issued in May 2026, was introduced to ensure regulatory compliance, strengthen academic standards, and address growing concerns surrounding the quality and credibility of the conversion programmes.
According to the commission, the widely adopted “one-year top-up” model does not align with approved university academic standards and was considered inconsistent with the regulatory framework guiding degree-awarding institutions in Nigeria.
The NUC also raised concerns that several institutions had allegedly turned the programmes into revenue-generating channels, with critics arguing that some universities allowed holders of lower-grade HND qualifications to obtain Bachelor’s degrees without sufficient academic rigor.
The commission maintained that polytechnic and university education serve different academic purposes and should remain distinct. It described the conversion programme as an encroachment into the university system, which falls strictly under the regulatory oversight of the NUC.
As an alternative pathway, the commission advised HND holders seeking further academic advancement to consider enrolling for a Post-Graduate Diploma (PGD) programme in accredited universities instead of pursuing direct conversion or top-up degrees.
The nationwide discontinuation is expected to affect many universities that had adopted the programme as a bridge between HND and Bachelor’s degree qualifications.
What This Means for HND Holders
The cancellation means HND graduates may no longer be able to use the fast-track university conversion route previously offered by several institutions.
Affected candidates may now need to pursue alternative academic options such as PGD programmes, direct entry admissions, professional certifications, or postgraduate studies depending on institutional requirements.
The development is also likely to reignite debates surrounding the long-standing HND and B.Sc dichotomy in Nigeria’s education and employment sectors, especially among polytechnic graduates seeking equal recognition in the labour market.
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