The day your call-up letter lands, the countdown begins. You have days, sometimes only a week or two, to figure out what you are taking to a military-style camp in a state you may never have visited. Most first-time corps members overpack useless items or arrive missing things they genuinely need. Neither outcome is helpful.
- Documents: The Non-Negotiables
- What NYSC Will Issue You at Camp
- Clothing to Pack (Beyond the Issued Kit)
- Toiletries and Personal Care
- Food Items and Nutrition
- Gadgets, Money, and the Waist Pouch
- Health Essentials and First Aid
- What Not to Bring: Banned and Restricted Items
- Stationery and Miscellaneous Practical Items
- Practical Tips for Arrival Day
- Final Word Before You Pack
The NYSC orientation camp runs for 21 days. It involves early morning drills, communal hostel living, lectures, skills training, and a cultural carnival. The environment is structured and deliberately stripped-down. Knowing what belongs in your bag before you zip it up makes the difference between a smooth three weeks and daily scrambling.
What to Pack for NYSC Orientation Camp 2026
Packing for NYSC orientation camp is not about bringing as much as possible. It is about bringing the right things for a specific, time-limited environment that has rules about what is allowed inside. This guide covers everything corps members need, organized by category, with separate notes where the needs of male and female corps members differ.
Documents: The Non-Negotiables
Nothing about the orientation camp experience matters if you cannot clear registration at the gate. NYSC security officers check documents before corps members are allowed into camp. Missing even one of the required items can result in rejection or delays that cost you days of the three-week program.
Every corps member should arrive with originals and multiple photocopies of each document. Keep them in a sealed, waterproof folder or envelope.
| Document | Copies Needed | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Call-Up Letter | Original + 5 photocopies | Print in colour. Download 2-3 days before camp |
| Statement of Result or Certificate | Original + 5 photocopies | HND or degree certificate. Provisional acceptable for awaiting results |
| Green Card (NYSC Registration Slip) | Original + 2 photocopies | Printed from the NYSC portal after payment |
| School ID Card | Original + 2 photocopies | Must be valid at time of camp |
| Medical Fitness Certificate | Original + 2 photocopies | Must be issued by a government hospital |
| Passport Photographs | 12 copies | White background. 8 for registration, 4 extras |
| International Passport (Foreign-trained only) | Original + 5 photocopies | Plus translated credentials where applicable |
Photocopy everything at home before you travel. Camp towns often have limited business services, and arriving without photocopies is a problem you cannot easily solve once you are already at the gate.
What NYSC Will Issue You at Camp
Once you clear registration and enter camp, NYSC issues a standard kit to every corps member. Knowing what is provided helps you avoid packing duplicates of things you will receive anyway.

The issued items typically include: khaki jacket and trousers, khaki cap, NYSC-branded white T-shirts (usually two), white shorts, a pair of jungle boots, white socks, and a crested vest. The quality and sizing of issued items vary significantly. Boot sizes especially tend to run inconsistent. If your size runs out, replacement khaki sets are usually available from vendors inside camp, generally in the range of four to five thousand naira.
Do not rely entirely on what is issued. Many corps members find the T-shirts do not fit well, and having extra white tops of your own keeps you comfortable throughout the camp.
Clothing to Pack (Beyond the Issued Kit)
The dress code at orientation camp is specific. Corps members are expected to wear white on white during official activities: plain white round-neck T-shirts, white shorts, and white canvas shoes. On parade days, the full khaki uniform applies.
For All Corps Members
| Item | Recommended Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Plain white round-neck T-shirts | 5 to 7 | In addition to those issued by NYSC |
| White shorts (knee-length) | 5 to 7 | Avoid prints or logos |
| White canvas/sneakers | 1 pair | Broken in before camp if possible |
| White socks | 7 pairs | Daily wear during drills |
| Plain mufti clothes (non-white) | 3 to 5 outfits | For evenings and non-official periods |
| Flip-flops/bathroom slippers | 1 pair | For hostel, bathroom, and rest periods |
| Bedsheet and pillowcase | 1 set | White or plain. Camp beds are basic |
| Light blanket or duvet | 1 | Nights can be cold, especially in northern states |
Additional Items for Female Corps Members
| Item | Notes |
|---|---|
| Sanitary pads or tampons (2-3 packs) | Camp shops may stock them, but prices are inflated |
| Sports bras (4 to 5) | More practical than underwire bras during drills |
| Hair ties, scarves, or bonnets | Hair management during paramilitary activities |
| Modest sleepwear | Hostels are shared spaces with varying privacy levels |
Toiletries and Personal Care
The camp provides no toiletries. You need to arrive fully stocked. Vendors sell basic items inside camp, but prices are noticeably higher than what you would pay outside. Buying from home saves money and guarantees you have your preferred brands.
Every corps member should pack: bathing soap, toothpaste and toothbrush, roll-on deodorant, shaving supplies, a sponge or loofah, a large plastic bucket for bathing (camp bathrooms are bucket-wash setups in most states), two towels, slippers for the bathroom, toilet paper, a small mirror, and a comb or brush.
Female corps members should add skincare essentials, a makeup bag if they use cosmetics, and sufficient hair care products since access to salons during camp is limited. Body lotion is practical for all corps members, especially if posted to a northern state where the weather can be dry.
Mosquito nets are not optional. Camp hostels are open and often poorly screened. Malaria is a real risk, particularly in camps located in riverine or humid regions. Pack a net and set it up on your first night.
Food Items and Nutrition
NYSC provides communal meals three times a day at camp. The quality and quantity vary from state to state and from batch to batch. Most corps members supplement what is served with personal food supplies. You are not required to eat only what is provided.
Cooking is strictly prohibited. You cannot bring electric stoves, gas burners, or any cooking equipment into camp. Only ready-to-eat items are allowed.
Practical food items to pack include: garri, milk, sugar, Milo or cocoa powder, Golden Morn or similar instant cereals, biscuits and crackers, noodles that can be eaten dry or soaked in hot water obtained from camp kitchens, peanut butter, and small packs of juice or bottled water for the first day. Groundnuts, chin chin, and similar snacks are also practical.
Bring a plastic plate, a bowl, a cup, and at least one spoon. You will need these for mealtimes since camp does not consistently provide individual utensils.
Gadgets, Money, and the Waist Pouch
Electricity supply at NYSC camps is inconsistent. Most camps have power for limited hours each day. A power bank with a minimum capacity of 10,000mAh is not a luxury item at camp. It is infrastructure.
Corps members are allowed to bring phones into camp, but phones must not be used during drills or official parade sessions. Keep your phone in a waist pouch when on the parade ground. This is both a rule and a practical safety measure since pickpocketing is a known issue on busy parade grounds.
Laptops, tablets, and extension cords are banned in most camps. If found, they are typically seized and returned after the three weeks. Do not bring them.
On cash: most camp locations have no ATM on-site, and mobile banking transfers may not always be possible in areas with poor network coverage. Arrive with physical cash. Budgets from recent batches suggest that between twenty thousand and thirty-five thousand naira covers personal expenses for the full three weeks, covering snacks, laundry, hair, and anything the camp does not provide. The figure varies based on the state you are posted to and your personal spending habits.
| Item | Notes |
|---|---|
| Phone and charger | Android or iPhone. Keep charger in bag at all times |
| Power bank (10,000mAh minimum) | Essential given irregular electricity |
| Waist pouch | For phone during parade. Keeps phone safe and accessible |
| Torch or rechargeable lamp | For nights when power goes out |
| Padlock (small) | For hostel lockers or luggage security |
| Cash (N20,000 to N35,000 range) | No ATMs in most camps. Bring physical naira notes |
Health Essentials and First Aid
Camp health centres exist in all NYSC orientation camps, and medical staff are available on-site. That said, basic personal medication and first aid supplies reduce your dependence on the clinic queue for minor issues.
What to pack: paracetamol for headaches and fever, antimalarial medication (consult your doctor before camp on whether prophylactic treatment is appropriate), oral rehydration salts, ibuprofen or any pain relief medication you normally use, plasters and small bandages, a personal hand sanitiser, and insect repellent for use on exposed skin during outdoor activities.
If you have a chronic health condition or take prescription medication, pack a sufficient supply for the full 21 days plus a few extra days as buffer. Inform the camp medical team of your condition on arrival. For serious medical conditions, your doctor can issue a certificate that supports requests for adjusted participation in physically demanding activities.
What Not to Bring: Banned and Restricted Items
NYSC camp security conducts bag checks on arrival. Items that violate camp rules are confiscated. In some cases, corps members face disciplinary panels for bringing prohibited items.
The following items are banned or strongly inadvisable: electric stoves or hot plates, gas cookers, laptops, tablets, extension cords, jewelry and expensive accessories, alcoholic beverages, knives or sharp objects beyond small nail files, and any weapons of any kind. Political materials and items associated with secret societies also fall under prohibited categories.
Beyond outright bans, it is worth leaving expensive clothing, shoes, or gadgets at home. Camp environments involve communal living with strangers. Theft happens. Bringing valuables beyond what you need creates unnecessary risk.
Stationery and Miscellaneous Practical Items
NYSC orientation includes lectures and SAED (Skills Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development) sessions where corps members take notes. Bring a notebook and several pens. A small stapler and extra paper come in handy for filling forms.
Other useful miscellaneous items include: a portable rechargeable fan (allowed in most camps), laundry detergent and hypo bleach for washing your whites, a clothes hanger or two, a laundry line rope or clips, and a transparent waterproof bag for protecting documents during rain. A small umbrella is worth having in camps located in southern or riverine states where rain is likely.
Passport photographs beyond the twelve required for registration are frequently needed for various forms throughout the service year. Having extra copies ready from home saves repeated visits to photo studios.
Practical Tips for Arrival Day
Arriving on the first day of camp is hectic. Hundreds of corps members arrive simultaneously, registration queues are long, and the process of getting processed, allocated a hostel bed, and issued a kit takes several hours. Early arrival gives you better hostel positioning, a more comfortable bunk, and time to set up before things get busy.
Male and female corps members are separated into different hostels. Once allocated a bunk, set up your mosquito net and padlock your bag immediately. Do not leave valuables unattended on a first day when the hostel is full of people you do not know.
Religious fellowship groups (both Christian and Muslim) operate within NYSC camps. Registering with one on arrival can provide support, mentorship, and welfare assistance throughout the three weeks. This is optional but practically useful for many corps members.
Final Word Before You Pack
The NYSC orientation camp is a finite, structured experience. Three weeks is short enough that what you bring should reflect discipline rather than comfort maximization. The corps members who have the best camp experiences tend to be the ones who arrived prepared, followed the rules, stayed adaptable, and did not spend their energy managing problems that good packing could have prevented.
Run through this list twice before you leave. Check your documents last, after everything else is packed. Keep originals and photocopies in a separate folder at the top of your bag. And when you get to camp, orient yourself fast, greet your hostel neighbours, and set up your bunk before you do anything else.