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Remote Work Equipment Checklist: What You Really Need (Under ₦150,000)

The first time I watched a “remote work setup tour” on YouTube, I felt sick.

There was a woman in California with three monitors, a standing desk, a noise-cancelling headset, and a chair that probably cost more than my entire apartment rent for a year.

I closed the video and didn’t apply for any remote jobs for another two weeks.

I thought: “If that’s what success looks like, I cannot afford to even start.”

That was a mistake. A costly one.

After two years of working remotely for US and European companies — sometimes from my bedroom, sometimes from a café, sometimes from my cousin’s house when NEPA took light for three days — I have learned something important:

Remote work equipment does not need to be impressive. It needs to be reliable enough.

Below is the exact checklist of what you actually need, what you can skip, and how to get everything for under ₦150,000 in Nigeria today.

The Minimum Viable Setup (What You Actually Need)

Let me be clear: This is not a “dream setup.” This is a “get hired and start earning” setup. You can upgrade later with your first paycheck.

ItemWhy You Need ItMinimum Acceptable SpecEstimated Cost (Used/Refurbished)
Laptop or ComputerYour primary work tool4GB RAM, 128GB storage, Windows 10 or ChromeOS₦80,000–₦120,000
Smartphone (you probably already have this)Backup internet hotspot, 2FA authenticationAny Android or iPhone from the last 5 years₦0 (already own)
Earbuds or Headphones (basic)Video calls, focus in noisy environmentsAny working earbuds with a mic₦5,000–₦10,000
Light Source (lamp or good window)Video interviews (you need to be seen clearly)Any desk lamp or bright window₦0–₦3,000
Total Minimum₦85,000–₦133,000

That is it. No standing desk. No second monitor. No noise-cancelling miracle headset.

Where to Buy in Nigeria (Without Getting Scammed)

I have bought used laptops from three different markets in Lagos. I have been sold a “like new” laptop that died after one week. I have also found absolute gems.

Read also: 5 biggest remote job myths

Here is what I learned:

Best options for used/refurbished equipment:

OptionBest ForRisk Level
Jiji.ng (verified sellers only)Laptops under ₦100kMedium (check seller rating)
Slot.ng (refurbished section)Warranty-backed devicesLow (but more expensive)
Computer Village, Lagos (if you are in Lagos)Bargaining powerHigh (need technical knowledge)
Facebook Marketplace (local groups)Rare dealsHigh (meet in person only)
A trusted friend or family member upgrading their deviceSafest optionVery low

My personal rule: Never buy a used laptop without seeing it turn on, connecting to WiFi, and opening a browser. If the seller refuses a live demo, walk away.

What You Can Skip (Do Not Waste Money on These)

Remote work “influencers” will try to convince you that you need these things. You do not.

ItemWhy It Is PushedWhy You Can Skip It
Second monitorLooks impressive on videoOne laptop screen is fine. Use Alt+Tab.
Ergonomic chairComfort marketingSit on a dining chair with a cushion.
Noise-cancelling headphonesBrand dealsBasic earbuds work. Mute yourself when not speaking.
UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply)Fear of NEPAUse your phone hotspot + laptop battery.
External webcam“Professional look”Your laptop’s built-in camera is fine.

I worked for 14 months without a single item on that “skip” list. I still got paid. I still got promoted. My clients never once asked what chair I was sitting in.

How to Handle NEPA and Internet (The Real Nigerian Challenge)

Let us be honest: The biggest equipment challenge in Nigeria is not the laptop. It is the light and the internet.

Here is what actually works, not what looks good on paper.

For NEPA (power cuts):

Your SituationWhat to DoCost
You have a laptop (battery lasts 2+ hours)Use laptop battery + phone hotspot for short outages₦0
Outages last 4+ hours regularlyBuy a small power bank (20,000mAh) for your phone. Work from your phone for urgent tasks.₦15,000–₦25,000
You need 8+ hours of continuous powerThis is expensive (inverter + battery = ₦200k+). Instead, find a coworking space or café with backup power. Pay daily.₦1,000–₦3,000 per day

For internet:

Your SituationBest OptionMonthly Cost
Good 4G coverage in your areaMTN or Glo data plan (buy the 30-day package, not daily)₦10,000–₦15,000
Poor network at homeFind a nearby café, library, or coworking space with reliable WiFi. Work there.₦500–₦2,000 per day
You do video calls dailyStarlink (expensive but reliable) OR use 4G + keep video off unless speaking₦40,000+ (Starlink) or ₦15,000 (4G)

Real talk: I have done client video calls from a car parked outside a café because the café was closed. I have submitted urgent files using a phone hotspot at 2am. It is not glamorous. But it works.

Upgrade Path: What to Buy with Your First Paycheck

Once you receive your first payment (let us say $500–$1,000), upgrade in this order. Do not buy random things.

PriorityItemWhyEstimated Cost
1Better laptop (8GB RAM, SSD)Speed = more work done = more money₦150,000–₦250,000
2Reliable power solution (small inverter or large power bank for laptop)Less stress during NEPA₦80,000–₦150,000
3A second phone line (different network)Backup internet when one network fails₦30,000–₦50,000 (phone) + data
4Comfortable chair (only if you have back pain)Health matters₦50,000–₦100,000

Notice that a second monitor and noise-cancelling headphones are not on this list. They never will be.

Real Example: How I Started (And What I Use Now)

When I started (2024):

  • Laptop: 2018 HP with cracked screen (free from a cousin who was upgrading)
  • Internet: MTN 4G on my phone (₦10,000/month)
  • Power: Laptop battery + prayer
  • Workspace: My bedroom bed (terrible for posture, but it worked)

Monthly earnings then: $0 for 3 months, then $400, then $800

What I use now (2026):

  • Laptop: Refurbished Lenovo ThinkPad (₦220,000 — bought with my 3rd paycheck)
  • Internet: Starlink (expensive, but I split it with two neighbors)
  • Power: Small inverter (₦120,000 — bought after 6 months)
  • Workspace: A proper desk and a ₦45,000 chair

Monthly earnings now: $2,500–$3,800

The equipment did not make me better. The consistency did. The equipment just made it easier to be consistent.

Your Equipment Action Plan (This Week)

DayTask
Day 1Inventory what you already own (laptop, phone, earbuds, lamp). Write it down.
Day 2Test your laptop battery. How long does it last unplugged? If under 1 hour, plan to stay plugged in.
Day 3Identify your backup internet source (neighbor, café, second SIM, or hotspot).
Day 4If you need to buy anything from the minimum checklist, search Jiji or ask friends. Do not rush.
Day 5Set up a clean, quiet corner in your home. Even a table pushed against a wall is fine.
Day 6Apply for one remote job. Do not wait until your setup is “perfect.” It will never be perfect.

The Truth No One Tells You

Your equipment is not what will get you hired.

Your skills, your communication, and your persistence are what will get you hired.

I have seen someone with a ₦3 million setup get rejected from every job because they could not write a clear email. I have seen someone working from a phone in a shared apartment get hired because they showed up on time and did what they promised.

The best equipment in the world cannot fix a lack of follow-through.

And the worst equipment in the world cannot stop someone who refuses to quit.

P.S. — This checklist is based on prices and availability in Nigeria as of June 2026. If you are reading this later and something has changed (like laptop prices or data costs), let me know and I will update it.

— Gabriel, Seekersnews

Written by Friday Gabriel

A Nigerian entrepreneur, digital strategist, and content creator with hands-on experience building and scaling brands across technology, digital marketing, consumer goods, and media. He leads seekersnews team.

As the founder of SeekerNews.com, he crafts actionable content on tech innovation, business growth, and digital opportunities shaping Africa’s future. His background in marketing, brand storytelling, and affiliate strategy makes his insights both credible and practical.

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