GigaLayer acquires Registeram, tightenins grip on Nigeria’s cloud infrastructure market
The Nigerian cloud infrastructure market remains on a consolidation spree as GigaLayer announces the acquisition of Registeram, a domain registration and hosting services company established in 2008.
GigaLayer has been increasing its footprint in the Nigerian hosting industry. The company has previously acquired brands such as Trudigits, Hub8, MainOne’s SMEinaBox, and LagosHost. With the addition of Registeram to its list of acquired brands, GigaLayer has not only enhanced its footprint but also helped to consolidate a fragmented Nigerian market.
According to founder and CEO Ahmad Mukoshy, the company views the acquisition as a step toward building durable infrastructure rather than simply expanding its customer list. As Nigerian businesses navigate stricter data governance expectations, local hosting capacity has become increasingly relevant. Therefore, infrastructure ownership and regulatory alignment now influence purchasing decisions more directly than in previous years.
Registeram customers will transition to GigaLayer’s enterprise platform. The company plans to migrate services in phases to ensure continuity while improving redundancy and security controls. In addition, customers will gain access to expanded cloud compute and high availability hosting environments.
Meanwhile, Nigeria’s digital economy continues to mature. More enterprises now require low latency performance, local data residency compliance and stable pricing structures. Consequently, providers that operate within the country’s economic and regulatory framework hold a structural advantage.
The founders of Registeram are expected to step down after the acquisition, allowing GigaLayer to take complete control. However, the company is still investing in infrastructure at its Lagos data centers to handle enterprise-class workloads.
With the level of competition between hyperscale companies and local players increasing, acquisitions among Nigerian companies indicate a shift in strategy. Rather than competing on the basis of scale, local companies are now competing on the basis of proximity, readiness, and familiarity. In this scenario, acquisitions like the above indicate a sense of ambition and adaptability in the African cloud infrastructure market.

