A Port Harcourt High Court has fined three men $52,000 (£40,000) each for hijacking a ship in March and securing a ransom of $200,000 for the release of its crew.
These are the first convictions in the West African state since a new anti-piracy law came into force last year.
Nigeria has been under pressure from the shipping industry to curb piracy in the Gulf of Guinea.
It accounts for more than 80% of maritime kidnappings globally, the International Maritime Bureau says.
The three, who are believed to include two Nigerians and a foreign national, pleaded guilty to two counts of piracy during their trial in the High Court in the oil hub of Port Harcourt.
They are accused of being part of a gang that seized a vessel off Equatorial Guinea’s coast in March.
They are alleged to have demanded a $2m ransom for the crew’s release, but were paid $200,000.
The Nigerian navy arrested the men.
Almost 50 crew were kidnapped in the Gulf of Guinea in the first half of this year, compared with 27 last year, according to the IMB.
The director-general of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, Bashir Jamoh, welcomed the verdict.
“This will serve as a deterrent to other criminal elements who are still engaged in the nefarious activities on our waterways,” he said.
Asked whether financial penalties alone were enough of a deterrent, he told the BBC:
“Absolutely – now we have a legal instrument to prosecute effectively and put the pirates out of business legally speaking.”
The International Maritime Bureau (IMB) also welcomed the men’s conviction.
“It is the deterrent which was lacking,” IMB spokesman Cyrus Moody told the BBC.
Another six men pleaded not guilty and their trial continues.
They are accused of being part of a gang that seized a vessel off Equatorial Guinea’s coast in March.
They are alleged to have demanded a $2m ransom for the crew’s release, but were paid $200,000.
The Nigerian navy arrested the men.
Almost 50 crew were kidnapped in the Gulf of Guinea in the first half of this year, compared with 27 last year, according to the IMB. BBC News