January 1, 2026, officially marks the start of one of Nigeria’s biggest fiscal resets in decades. Following the signing of the Nigeria Tax Act and related legislation by President Bola Tinubu in 2025, the new rules guiding personal income, corporate taxes, and enforcement are now in effect.
The reforms are designed to simplify Nigeria’s long-fragmented tax system. But while low-income earners get meaningful relief, high-earning individuals and large businesses will face tighter compliance and clearer consequences.

Personal Income Tax: Who Pays and Who Doesn’t
For employees and individual earners, the most immediate change is the restructuring of Personal Income Tax.
Anyone earning ₦800,000 or less annually, roughly ₦66,667 monthly, is now completely exempt from personal income tax. This is one of the most notable shifts in the reform and directly targets low-income earners.
Those earning above the exemption threshold will now be taxed under progressive income bands, with rates increasing as income rises. The highest rate is capped at 25 percent for individuals earning over ₦50 million annually.
Another major adjustment is the removal of the Consolidated Relief Allowance. In its place, targeted reliefs have been introduced. One of them is Rent Relief, which allows taxpayers to deduct 20 percent of their annual rent from taxable income, up to a maximum of ₦500,000.
No, Your Bank Narration Is Not Being Taxed
In response to widespread online concern, Taiwo Oyedele, Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms, addressed the issue publicly.
Taiwo Oyedele clarified that tax authorities do not monitor or tax individuals based on bank transfer descriptions.
According to him, claims that transaction narrations could trigger automatic taxation are false. Nigeria’s tax system remains self-declaratory, meaning individuals report their income annually rather than being monitored per transaction.
What Changes for Businesses
While some corporate reforms will roll out gradually, several key frameworks are already active and will shape business planning in 2026.
Small businesses with an annual turnover of ₦100 million or less are now exempt from Companies Income Tax and the newly introduced Development Levy.
For larger companies, a 4 percent Development Levy now applies to assessable profits. This replaces multiple older charges, including the Tertiary Education Tax and the Police Trust Fund Levy, simplifying corporate obligations into a single line item.
Banks are also under new reporting rules. Financial institutions are required to disclose account information to the Nigeria Revenue Service only when quarterly turnover exceeds ₦25 million for individuals or ₦100 million for companies.
Digital Enforcement and Tougher Penalties
The Nigeria Revenue Service, formerly known as FIRS, is shifting toward a digital-first enforcement model.
A Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) is now mandatory for major financial transactions. For individuals, the National Identification Number (NIN) automatically serves as the TIN.
Penalties have also become stricter. Failure to file tax returns now attracts an immediate ₦100,000 fine for the first month of default, followed by ₦50,000 for every additional month.
The Bottom Line
Nigeria’s new tax regime brings relief for low-income earners, clarity for small businesses, and firmer accountability for high earners and large corporations. As enforcement becomes more digital and structured, compliance will no longer be optional but expected.



