Tax Revenue Increases By 49% to N15.8 trillion in five months
Abu_Afro@abubakar_217
36 Posts
#1 · June 19, 2026, 10:41 am
Quote from Abu_Afro on June 19, 2026, 10:41 amNigeria’s tax revenue collected by the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) surged by 49% to N15.8 trillion (approx. $11.6 billion) in the first five months of 2026, compared to N10.6 trillion during the same period in 2025. This outperformance beat the baseline growth target and was driven by recent sweeping tax system overhauls and new levies across key sectors.The significant financial milestone is a product of ongoing domestic revenue mobilization efforts and newly implemented tax policies:
- Total Collections: Rose to N15.8 trillion between January and May, surpassing the government’s baseline growth target of 11.6%.
- Policy Drivers: The surge was primarily propelled by comprehensive tax system overhauls and the introduction of new levies within industries such as petroleum and mining.
- Base Growth: Excluding the newly introduced taxes, standard tax collections still grew by 15%, bringing the base figure to N12.2 trillion.
- Non-Oil Contributions: Non-oil revenue also saw an increase of 12.3%, reaching N8.2 trillion due to tighter compliance measures and enforcement.
This performance supports the federal government’s broader strategy to boost the country’s tax-to-GDP ratio from about 13% toward an ambitious 18% target by 2030, reducing the state’s reliance on borrowing to fund budgets.How these new reforms and levies impact specific corporate sectors:The Nigeria Tax Reform Acts have significantly shifted the operational tax liabilities and administrative expectations for corporate entities operating in Nigeria. Signed into law by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the four core bills—the Nigeria Tax Act (NTA), the Nigeria Tax Administration Act (NTAA), the Nigeria Revenue Service Act (NRSA), and the Joint Revenue Board Act (JRBA)—collectively structure the fiscal environment to emphasize digital compliance, transparency, and targeted revenue collection.
1. Multi-Sector Corporate Impact AnalysisThe application of the new framework directly changes tax rates, consolidated levies, and operational rules for specific industries:Banking and Financial Services
- Withholding on Dollar Deposits: Starting January 1, 2026, banks must automatically withhold a 10% tax on interest earned from domiciliary and foreign currency accounts.
- Compliance Burden: Financial institutions act as primary collection agents, remitting these deductions directly to the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS).
Petroleum, Oil, and Gas
- Royalty Consolidation: The collection of petroleum and mineral royalties has officially transferred to the NRS, helping fuel a 20% spike in oil-related tax revenues to N3.96 trillion in early 2026.
- Capital Gains Realignment: Corporate Capital Gains Tax (CGT) has been increased from 10% to 30%, explicitly bringing indirect offshore corporate share transfers under the local tax net.
Manufacturing and General Corporates
- The Development Levy: A unified 4% Development Levy on assessable profits replaces multiple disparate charges, such as the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) and IT levies.
- Pioneer Status Phaseout: The legacy Pioneer Status Incentive has been replaced by the structured Economic Development Incentive (EDI) framework to enforce performance-driven metrics.
MSMEs and Small Businesses
- Full Exemptions: Small businesses with an annual gross turnover of ≤ N100 million and fixed assets of ≤ N250 million are entirely exempt from Company Income Tax (CIT), CGT, and the 4% Development Levy.
2. Mandatory Steps for Transitioning to the New Tax ActsCorporate compliance teams must systematically audit and align their accounting pipelines with the NRS requirements via the following sequence:[1. Verify Scale & Tiers] ──> [2. Adjust Payroll Bands] ──> [3. Deploy Digital Systems] ──> [4. Monthly Reconciliation]
- Verify Asset and Turnover Tiers
Audit financial statements against the new definitions for small, medium, and large companies to confirm exemption eligibility or applicable CIT brackets. [1]- Reconfigure Payroll and Tax-Exempt Bands
Adjust internal Pay-As-You-Earn (PAYE) calculation tools to exempt low-income staff earning ≤ N1.2 million annually, while scaling tax adjustments for high-income earners up to the 25% top marginal rate.- Deploy Digital Filing Architecture
Transition all compliance accounting to real-time reporting software. The NRS mandates digital filing, supported by mobile applications and localized self-service portals.- Implement Monthly Withholding and Reconciliation
Enforce structural monthly reconciliation protocols between your corporate accounting department and the NRS Government Business Office to match outstanding liabilities and maintain active Tax Clearance Certificates (TCC) required for government contracting.

Nigeria’s tax revenue collected by the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) surged by 49% to N15.8 trillion (approx. $11.6 billion) in the first five months of 2026, compared to N10.6 trillion during the same period in 2025. This outperformance beat the baseline growth target and was driven by recent sweeping tax system overhauls and new levies across key sectors.
The significant financial milestone is a product of ongoing domestic revenue mobilization efforts and newly implemented tax policies:
- Total Collections: Rose to N15.8 trillion between January and May, surpassing the government’s baseline growth target of 11.6%.
- Policy Drivers: The surge was primarily propelled by comprehensive tax system overhauls and the introduction of new levies within industries such as petroleum and mining.
- Base Growth: Excluding the newly introduced taxes, standard tax collections still grew by 15%, bringing the base figure to N12.2 trillion.
- Non-Oil Contributions: Non-oil revenue also saw an increase of 12.3%, reaching N8.2 trillion due to tighter compliance measures and enforcement.
This performance supports the federal government’s broader strategy to boost the country’s tax-to-GDP ratio from about 13% toward an ambitious 18% target by 2030, reducing the state’s reliance on borrowing to fund budgets.
How these new reforms and levies impact specific corporate sectors:
The Nigeria Tax Reform Acts have significantly shifted the operational tax liabilities and administrative expectations for corporate entities operating in Nigeria. Signed into law by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the four core bills—the Nigeria Tax Act (NTA), the Nigeria Tax Administration Act (NTAA), the Nigeria Revenue Service Act (NRSA), and the Joint Revenue Board Act (JRBA)—collectively structure the fiscal environment to emphasize digital compliance, transparency, and targeted revenue collection.
1. Multi-Sector Corporate Impact Analysis
The application of the new framework directly changes tax rates, consolidated levies, and operational rules for specific industries:
Banking and Financial Services
- Withholding on Dollar Deposits: Starting January 1, 2026, banks must automatically withhold a 10% tax on interest earned from domiciliary and foreign currency accounts.
- Compliance Burden: Financial institutions act as primary collection agents, remitting these deductions directly to the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS).
Petroleum, Oil, and Gas
- Royalty Consolidation: The collection of petroleum and mineral royalties has officially transferred to the NRS, helping fuel a 20% spike in oil-related tax revenues to N3.96 trillion in early 2026.
- Capital Gains Realignment: Corporate Capital Gains Tax (CGT) has been increased from 10% to 30%, explicitly bringing indirect offshore corporate share transfers under the local tax net.
Manufacturing and General Corporates
- The Development Levy: A unified 4% Development Levy on assessable profits replaces multiple disparate charges, such as the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) and IT levies.
- Pioneer Status Phaseout: The legacy Pioneer Status Incentive has been replaced by the structured Economic Development Incentive (EDI) framework to enforce performance-driven metrics.
MSMEs and Small Businesses
- Full Exemptions: Small businesses with an annual gross turnover of ≤ N100 million and fixed assets of ≤ N250 million are entirely exempt from Company Income Tax (CIT), CGT, and the 4% Development Levy.
2. Mandatory Steps for Transitioning to the New Tax Acts
Corporate compliance teams must systematically audit and align their accounting pipelines with the NRS requirements via the following sequence:
[1. Verify Scale & Tiers] ──> [2. Adjust Payroll Bands] ──> [3. Deploy Digital Systems] ──> [4. Monthly Reconciliation]
- Verify Asset and Turnover Tiers
Audit financial statements against the new definitions for small, medium, and large companies to confirm exemption eligibility or applicable CIT brackets. [1] - Reconfigure Payroll and Tax-Exempt Bands
Adjust internal Pay-As-You-Earn (PAYE) calculation tools to exempt low-income staff earning ≤ N1.2 million annually, while scaling tax adjustments for high-income earners up to the 25% top marginal rate. - Deploy Digital Filing Architecture
Transition all compliance accounting to real-time reporting software. The NRS mandates digital filing, supported by mobile applications and localized self-service portals. - Implement Monthly Withholding and Reconciliation
Enforce structural monthly reconciliation protocols between your corporate accounting department and the NRS Government Business Office to match outstanding liabilities and maintain active Tax Clearance Certificates (TCC) required for government contracting.
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Adesola_M@adesola_752
60 Posts
#2 · June 19, 2026, 11:26 am
Quote from Adesola_M on June 19, 2026, 11:26 amA 49% increase to ₦15.8 trillion in just five months is an absolute fiscal milestone. If the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) can maintain this momentum, we might actually hit that 18% tax-to-GDP ratio before the 2030 target.
A 49% increase to ₦15.8 trillion in just five months is an absolute fiscal milestone. If the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) can maintain this momentum, we might actually hit that 18% tax-to-GDP ratio before the 2030 target.
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