Reporting by Business Insider Africa indicates that the Nigerian government has set an ambitious fiscal target to generate approximately $30.1 billion (N40.7 trillion) in tax and royalty revenue for the 2026 fiscal year. Dr. Zach Adedeji, Executive Chairman of the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), disclosed that this drive leans heavily on non-oil tax reforms and improved petroleum royalty collections to narrow budget deficits.
The strategy involves a structural shift in revenue mobilization, aiming to reduce the number of taxes while simplifying compliance for small businesses and informal traders. By streamlining the system, the government hopes to strengthen the social contract and promote economic inclusion for women and youth entrepreneurs.
Validation of this fiscal direction was found in The Punch, which noted that “these reforms represent far more than legislative changes; they represent a structural shift,” and Daily Post, which reported that “the NRS is projecting record collections to stabilize the national currency and restore investor confidence.”
Echotitbits take: This $30 billion target is a “make-or-break” move for the Tinubu administration’s fiscal sustainability. While reducing the number of taxes is a welcome relief for SMEs, the success of this plan hinges entirely on the NRS’s ability to digitize collection and prevent leakages in the informal sector.
Source: Business Insider Africa – https://africa.businessinsider.com/markets/nigeria-targets-dollar30-billion-tax-revenue-in-2026-as-lawmakers-seek-clarity/eqe4jcc, March 26, 2026
Photo credit: Business Insider Africa




