On January 1, 2026, Nigeria officially launched its transformative new tax laws and fiscal reforms, a move steeped in promise and public apprehension.
Signed into law by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in June 2025, the Nigeria Tax (Fair Taxation and Informal Sector) Act and companion legislations aim to overhaul the nation’s revenue framework.
Despite vocal opposition urging a delay, the federal government pressed ahead, betting on these changes to foster fiscal sustainability amid economic pressures.
President Tinubu, in a Tuesday address, reiterated that the reforms would not burden ordinary citizens, countering fears amplified by inflation-weary Nigerians.
This rollout follows months of debate, judicial clearance, and legislative tweaks, setting the stage for a broader tax base without blanket rate hikes.
The Road to Implementation: Controversy and Clearance
The reforms’ path was anything but smooth.
Critics, including the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), the House of Representatives Minority Caucus, former Senate Leader Ali Ndume.
Human rights lawyer Femi Falana (SAN), ex-Minister Oby Ezekwesili, Bauchi Governor Bala Mohammed, and sundry opposition voices, demanded a suspension for stakeholder consultations.
Tensions peaked when House member Abdulsamman Dasuki alleged discrepancies between the gazetted and enacted versions.
Prompting National Assembly leaders to mandate re-gazettling for transparency.
Judicial hurdles cleared decisively: Justice Bello Kawu of the FCT High Court dismissed a suit to block implementation, affirming the laws’ legality.
Echoing Tinubu, Taiwo Oyedele, Chairman of the Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee, defended the timeline.
Arguing it was essential to reposition Nigeria’s finances away from oil volatility.
These reforms stem from the 2024-2025 fiscal policy drive, consolidating over 60 taxes into fewer, streamlined levies.
Key pillars include the Tax Administration Bill, Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Bill, and sector-specific adjustments.
All designed to boost Nigeria’s dismal tax-to-GDP ratio, from 10.8% in 2024 (World Bank data), the lowest among major African economies, to a targeted 18% by 2027.
Expert Insights: Prof. Godwin Oyedokun Demystifies the Changes
In an exclusive interview with Daily Post on December 31, Prof. Godwin Oyedokun, a university don specializing in economics and accounting, urged calm amid the hype.
“These aren’t punitive measures to squeeze Nigerians,” he asserted.
“They’re about revenue efficiency, plugging leakages, and curtailing overreliance on oil, which accounts for 70% of federal revenue despite global energy transitions.”
Oyedokun contextualized Nigeria’s fiscal bind: mounting debt servicing (N13.6 trillion budgeted for 2026), infrastructure deficits, and security costs necessitate broader revenue without crippling the poor.
“The goal is a wider tax net, not higher rates for all,” he explained, highlighting exemptions for informal traders and low earners.
Impact on Low-Income Earners: Protections Amid Indirect Risks
Public anxiety centers on whether reforms exacerbate living costs.
Oyedokun reassured that safeguards persist: personal income tax exemptions remain at ₦800,000 annually for individuals (rising to ₦1.2 million for low earners via new brackets), shielding civil servants, artisans, and petty traders.
“The vulnerable, over 60% of Nigerians earning below ₦100,000 monthly, are largely untouched directly,” he noted.
Indirect effects, however, warrant vigilance.
“Businesses facing stiffer compliance might hike prices for goods like VAT-applicable items,” Oyedokun cautioned.
In an economy with 33.9% headline inflation (December 2025 NBS figures), this could ripple through markets.
Yet, he added optimism: harmonized state taxes (capping levies at 15 types) should curb multiple taxation, potentially lowering consumer burdens long-term.
Businesses and Corporates: Short-Term Pains, Long-Term Gains
For enterprises, the shift demands adaptation.
Oyedokun outlined heightened digital reporting via the new Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), anti-evasion tech like AI audits, and penalties for non-filers.
“Compliance costs may spike initially, think software upgrades and training, but fairness levels the field,” he said.
Benefits loom larger: “Predictable taxes attract FDI, which dipped to $2.9 billion in 2025 (UNCTAD).
Better revenue funds roads, power (targeting 10,000MW additions), and ports, supercharging logistics for exporters.”
SMEs, comprising 96% of businesses, gain from simplified VAT (7.5% standard rate) and incentives for digital economy players.
| KEY TAX CHANGES | OLD SYSTEM | NEW REFORMS | EXPECTED IMPACT |
| Personal Income Tax Threshold | 600,000 | 800,000+ (progressive brackets) | Protects low earners, higher payers contribute more |
| Corporate Tax Rate | Up to 35% | 25-30% Tiered by turnover | Encourages compliance, aids SMEs |
| VAT Rate | 7.5% | Retained at 7.5% exemptions expanded | Minimal priceshock, boosts revenue ₦3trn + annually |
| Number of Taxes | 60+ | Consolidated to -10 Federal + harmonized state | Reduces Harassment, evasion |
| Tax-to-GDP Target | 10.8% | 18% by 2027 | Funds ₦50Trn + infrastructure |
Broader Economic Context: Why Now?
Locally, they complement Tinubu’s 2025 gains: inflation down to 14.8%, reserves at $45bn, GDP growth at 4.2%.
Oyedokun warned, however, of pitfalls: “Poor enforcement could breed corruption; without anti-smuggling tech at borders, evasion persists.”
A Call for Engagement, Accountability, and Optimism
Prof. Oyedokun’s verdict: Approach with “informed caution, not panic.”
He advocated public education via town halls, FIRS apps, and NRS helplines.
“Demand accountability, taxes must yield roads in Lagos traffic, clinics in rural Bauchi, schools in Kano,” he urged.
Government pledges ring true only with delivery.
As Oyedokun concluded, “Short-term discomfort is possible, but equitable rollout promises prosperity.
Nigerians, engage; leaders, deliver.”
The 2026 tax era tests this pact, success could redefine fiscal federalism, failure risks unrest.


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