Top 10 Recruitment Agencies in Lagos for Remote US Support Jobs (Verified List)

Forget the vague advice about “polishing your LinkedIn profile.” If you are in Lagos and looking to earn in USD or gain international experience without relocating, the landscape has shifted. It is no longer just about fighting for scraps on Upwork.

Major US and European companies are actively moving their “back office” support—Customer Service, Tech Support, and Virtual Assistance—to Lagos. They don’t always hire directly; they use specific recruitment agencies and Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) firms to handle the staffing.

This guide cuts through the noise. We have verified the top agencies in Lagos that actually place candidates in these roles, the specific requirements you need, and the red flags that signal a scam.

Key Facts: The “Remote” Reality in Lagos

Before you apply, understand the two types of “Remote” US jobs available in Nigeria right now:

  1. True Remote: You work from your home in Surulere or Lekki.
  2. On-Site Outsourcing: You work for a US client (like Microsoft or a US Bank) but you physically report to a secure office in Victoria Island or Ikeja. This is currently the most common entry point.

Quick Comparison: Top Agencies at a Glance

Agency NameBest For…Cost to CandidateRemote vs. On-Site
Outsource GlobalCustomer Success & Legal SupportFreeHybrid/On-Site (Abuja/Lagos)
Tek ExpertsIT Support (Microsoft/Azure)FreeOn-Site (Victoria Island)
Jobberman (Remote)General Admin & HRFree100% Remote Options
Robert WaltersSenior Finance/Tech RolesFree100% Remote
Workforce GroupBank Support/Entry LevelFreeMostly On-Site
ALX / The RoomTech Talent PipelineFree (Scholarship)Remote Placement

The Top Verified Recruitment Agencies

1. Outsource Global

Location: Lagos & Abuja

The Deal: This is arguably the heavyweight of Nigerian BPOs. They service huge US and UK clients in legal, medical, and customer support sectors.

The Role: You are essentially a US employee sitting in Nigeria. You work US time zones (often night shifts).

Specific Requirement: They are strict on diction. You will likely undergo a “Voice Assessment” to ensure your accent is neutral enough for US customers.

2. Tek Experts

Location: Victoria Island, Lagos

The Deal: If you have a background in IT (or just a passion for it), this is your target. They handle technical support for global giants like Microsoft.

The “Street Smart” Insight: They invest heavily in training. Even if you don’t have a deep tech background, if you pass their aptitude test and show “trainability,” they will hire you.

Warning: It is high-pressure. You are dealing with enterprise-level US clients who need their servers fixed now.

3. Robert Walters Nigeria

Location: Ikoyi, Lagos

The Deal: This is not for entry-level customer support. Robert Walters focuses on mid-to-senior level professionals. If you are a Chartered Accountant (ICAN/ACCA) or a Senior Dev, they recruit for remote roles with multinational firms entering the African market.

Salary Expectation: often pegged in USD or high-tier NGN (e.g., N800k – N3m/month).

4. Jobberman (The “Remote” Filter)

The Deal: While a general job board, Jobberman has a specific “Remote” filter that is highly effective.

How to Hack It: Don’t just browse. Set up a Job Alert specifically for keywords like “US Client,” “EST Timezone,” or “Dollar Pay.”

Verified Strategy: Look for listings by “Shadowing” companies—agencies that hire VAs for real estate agents in Texas or California.

5. Kimberly Ryan

Location: Lagos

The Deal: An “Old Guard” HR firm in Nigeria. They are trusted by multinationals who need local compliance but foreign workflow. They often handle recruitment for Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) companies launching in Lagos.

6. The Room (ALX Africa)

The Deal: Not a traditional agency, but a talent agent. You complete their intense training program (often in Software Engineering, VA, or Data Science), and they plug you into their “Fellowship” where US employers hire directly.

Why it wins: They vet you before you meet the client, which makes US employers trust them more than random applicants.

Step-by-Step Guide: How to Get Hired

Applying for these roles is different from applying to a Nigerian bank.

Step 1: The ” ATS” Resume

US recruiters use Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS). If your CV has graphics, photos of your face, or your “State of Origin,” delete them.

  • Do: Use a clean, text-only Word document.
  • Do: List skills in US terms (e.g., instead of “IT Student,” use “Technical Support Intern”).

Step 2: The Tech Setup (For True Remote)

If you land a 100% remote role, you cannot rely on NEPA/Band A. During the interview, you must prove you have:

  • Power: A functional inverter or generator (at least 3.5KVA).
  • Internet: Fiber Optic (IPNX/FiberOne) or Starlink. MTN MiFi is rarely accepted as a primary source due to latency.

Step 3: The Documents

Have these ready before you apply. Speed matters.

  • NIN Slip: Mandatory for verification.
  • Police Character Certificate: US companies require background checks. You can get this from the force CID at Alagbon Close, Ikoyi. Cost is usually between N15,000 – N25,000 depending on “processing speed.”
  • Guarantors: You will need two credible guarantors (Civil Servants or Clergy).

Local Context: Getting Paid in Lagos

This is where many fail. If the job pays in USD, you cannot use a standard savings account.

  • DOM Account: Open a Domiciliary Account (GTBank and Zenith are popular). You will need two referees who have current accounts.
  • Fintech Alternatives: Apps like Grey (formerly Abeg) or Geegpay allow you to receive USD virtually and swap to Naira at black market rates (which is higher than the bank rate).
    • Note: Always check the current spread. Sometimes the “Grey” rate is N50 lower than the P2P market on Binance.

The Warning: How to Spot a Scam

The “US Visa Job” scam is rampant in Lagos. Here is how to stay safe:

  1. The “Registration Fee” Red Flag:Legitimate agencies (Jobberman, Outsource Global, Tek Experts) NEVER charge you money. They charge the employer. If an “agent” asks for N5,000 for a “form” or “verification fee,” block them immediately.
  2. The “Telegram Interview”:No US company will interview you exclusively via text chat on Telegram or WhatsApp. If there is no Zoom/Teams video call, it is a scam.
  3. The Gmail Domain:Official recruiters email from @companyname.com. If you receive an offer letter from [email protected], it is fake.

The Verdict

Is it worth it?

  • Pros: You earn significantly above the Nigerian average. Entry-level support roles often pay N150,000 – N300,000, while skilled tech roles hit $1,000+ (N1.6m+). You gain exposure to US work culture (Agile, JIRA, Slack).
  • Cons: The hours are brutal. Working EST (New York time) means you are working 2:00 PM to 10:00 PM or later. It kills your social life in Lagos.
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