Tag: FIRS

  • Tax reform credibility test: lawmakers demand probe into ‘altered’ bills after passage

    Tax reform credibility test: lawmakers demand probe into ‘altered’ bills after passage

    Photo credit: The Punch
    2025-12-22 09:00:00

    Reporting by *The Punch* indicates Nigeria’s ongoing tax reform drive has hit a credibility storm, with fresh claims that versions of tax bills circulating publicly may differ from what lawmakers passed.

    The dispute is fueling calls for a formal probe to confirm the authentic text, track the legislative handling from committee to final transmission, and determine whether any post-passage changes occurred.

    Stakeholders argue that even the perception of tampering can undermine compliance, investor confidence, and the legitimacy of any reforms meant to widen the tax net and strengthen revenues.

    Pressure is also mounting for certified copies to be made publicly available—so citizens, businesses, and tax professionals can compare what was debated, what was passed, and what was ultimately forwarded for assent.

    Vanguard’s coverage of the controversy described growing calls for lawmakers to “probe” the alleged changes, while *The Guardian (Nigeria)* also framed the episode as a trust issue around “tax reform” that could complicate implementation if not clarified quickly.

    **Echotitbits take:** In tax policy, process legitimacy is policy legitimacy. If government wants compliance, it must publish final gazetted versions fast, show redlines where possible, and make legislative documentation audit-proof—otherwise reform becomes litigation and politics, not revenue.

    Source: The Punch — December 22, 2025 (https://punchng.com/alleged-alterations-in-tax-laws-spark-calls-for-probe/)

  • FIRS Abuja office fire contained as agency begins investigation

    FIRS Abuja office fire contained as agency begins investigation

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-21 00:05:00

    According to The Punch, a fire incident affected one of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) offices in Wuse, Abuja, with officials saying there were no fatalities and the blaze was contained.

    FIRS said security personnel on duty responded quickly, supported by the FCT Fire Service and other emergency responders, preventing the flames from spreading to other parts of the building.

    The agency added that while some offices on the impacted floor were damaged, work to review safety protocols is underway as investigators determine what caused the outbreak.

    TheCable also reported the fire was contained and quoted FIRS’ statement that “no life was lost in the incident.” In a separate update, Punch quoted the agency saying preliminary findings point to “a possible electrical fault” as the likely cause.

    Echotitbits take:
    Even without casualties, any disruption at a key revenue agency invites scrutiny. Watch for an official incident report, confirmation of what infrastructure or records were affected, and any new safety measures rolled out across other FIRS locations.

    Source: The Punch — December 21, 2025 (https://punchng.com/firs-probes-abuja-office-fire/)
    The Punch 2025-12-21

  • Reps open probe into alleged ‘edited’ gazetted tax laws as politics heats up

    Reps open probe into alleged ‘edited’ gazetted tax laws as politics heats up

    Photo Credit: Punch / File
    2025-12-19 12:00:00

    Punch reports that the House of Representatives has set up an ad hoc committee to investigate claims that versions of new tax laws in circulation differ from what the National Assembly passed.

    The controversy is high-stakes: investors and citizens need certainty on what the law actually says—especially ahead of the planned January 2026 effective date.

    Verification: Premium Times confirms the House set up a seven-member committee to probe alleged discrepancies, while The Guardian reported the political demand to shift commencement.

    Quotes: Premium Times: “set up a seven-member ad hoc committee to investigate alleged discrepancies…” The Guardian: “demanded that the commencement date… be shifted…”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: If citizens believe laws can be altered after passage, legitimacy collapses. Watch for publication of an authenticated gazette, version control, and sanctions if wrongdoing is established.

    Source: The Punch — 2025-12-19 — https://punchng.com/reps-probe-tax-law-tweaks-pdp-demands-suspension/

    The Punch 2025-12-19

  • Tinubu says 2026 tax changes will ease burdens for low‑income Nigerians and SMEs

    Tinubu says 2026 tax changes will ease burdens for low‑income Nigerians and SMEs

    Photo Credit: Nigeria News
    2025-12-16

    Speaking through the Federal Inland Revenue Service chairman at an Ibadan roundtable, President Bola Tinubu says new tax laws slated for 2026 will bring relief for households and small businesses.

    According to the president’s remarks, the reforms are designed to reduce multiple taxation and exempt essential items and sectors such as food, medication, education, agriculture and shared transportation from what he called burdensome taxes.

    The messaging suggests government is trying to build public confidence ahead of implementation, amid concerns about compliance costs and how quickly relief will show up in prices and pay‑packets.

    Beyond the rhetoric, the key test will be the details: which goods and services qualify for exemptions, how VAT and PAYE changes are applied, and whether sub‑national taxes are harmonised to prevent ‘stacked’ levies on SMEs.

    The Nation: “The laws come with good news to the poor, the low-income earners as well as small businesses.”

    THISDAY: “The laws come with good news to the poor, the low-income earners as well as small businesses,” he said, explaining that food and medication would be exempt from burdensome taxes.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: If the exemptions are cleanly implemented, they could ease cost‑of‑living pressure and improve SME cashflow. Watch for the final implementing rules, VAT treatment of essentials, and how states align their own revenue drives with the federal posture.

    Source: Punch — December 17, 2025 — https://punchng.com/new-tax-law-coming-with-good-news-tinubu-assures-nigerians/

  • Senate tells FIRS to raise 2026 revenue target to ₦35trn, slams “multiple budgets”

    Senate tells FIRS to raise 2026 revenue target to ₦35trn, slams “multiple budgets”

    Photo credit: PunchNG (image on article page)
    2025-12-15

    According to The Punch, the Senate Committee on Finance criticised the Federal Government’s habit of running multiple budgets within a single fiscal year, warning it weakens fiscal discipline and planning.

    The report says the committee directed the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) to lift its 2026 revenue projection from ₦31tn to ₦35tn during discussions around the 2026–2028 MTEF/FSP.

    It also referenced a claimed revenue gap in the 2025 budget cycle, fueling arguments that rollovers and repeated revisions are becoming systemic.

    BusinessDay: “at least ₦35 trillion in revenue in 2026.”

    TheCable: “raise the 2026 target to N35 trillion from N31 trillion.”

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: This looks like early pressure-setting for 2026 budget negotiations. Watch whether FIRS follows with compliance tech, base-broadening, and enforcement—rather than new rate hikes—and whether the Executive adopts the higher benchmark.

    Source: The Punch — December 15, 2025 (https://punchng.com/senate-kicks-against-multiple-budgets-orders-firs-to-deliver-n35tn-revenue/)

  • FIRS pushes back on sovereignty fears over France tax cooperation MoU

    FIRS pushes back on sovereignty fears over France tax cooperation MoU

    2025-12-15 08:00:00

    According to The Punch, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) said a tax-cooperation MoU with France does not compromise Nigeria’s tax sovereignty amid public debate and calls from some groups to terminate the arrangement.

    The report says FIRS framed the agreement as technical cooperation and capacity support, rather than any transfer of authority over Nigeria’s tax administration.

    Punch notes the controversy underscores rising sensitivity around external partnerships as Nigeria pursues broader revenue and tax reforms.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: Cross-border tax cooperation can improve enforcement against profit shifting and illicit flows, but trust and transparency are essential. Watch for publication of key MoU terms, parliamentary oversight, and how FIRS explains safeguards on taxpayer data and jurisdiction.

    Source: Business Insider Africa — December 2025

    Business Insider Africa https://africa.businessinsider.com/local/lifestyle/nigeria-signs-tax-data-mou-with-france-raising-sovereignty-concerns/db2qdg7 December 2025

  • NEPZA asks for 10-year transition window as Nigeria tightens tax incentives for SEZs

    NEPZA asks for 10-year transition window as Nigeria tightens tax incentives for SEZs

    2025-12-15 08:00:00

    According to The Punch, the Nigeria Export Processing Zones Authority (NEPZA) urged the Federal Government to grant a 10‑year tax relief/transition period for operators in Special Economic Zones to protect investor confidence as a new tax act approaches implementation.

    Punch reports NEPZA warned that abrupt changes to incentives could disrupt long-term business plans for manufacturers, logistics hubs and exporters that invested under existing free-zone frameworks.

    The agency’s position, the report adds, is that predictable incentives remain central to global free-zone models and help Nigeria compete for investment.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: The policy trade-off is between widening the tax base and keeping Nigeria’s SEZ proposition competitive. Watch how the new tax act treats legacy incentives, whether a phased approach is adopted, and the response from manufacturers and export-oriented investors.

    Source: The Punch — December 6, 2025

    Photo credit/source: The Punch

    The Punch https://punchng.com/tax-reform-nepza-seeks-10-year-tax-relief-for-investors/ December 6, 2025

  • FG projects nearly ₦1.9trn from new 4% Development Levy in 2026 budget year

    FG projects nearly ₦1.9trn from new 4% Development Levy in 2026 budget year

    According to The Punch, the Federal Government is projecting about ₦1.899 trillion from the newly introduced 4% Development Levy in 2026, as the levy begins to feature in budget planning following Nigeria’s 2025 tax reforms.

    Punch reported that the levy is structured as a consolidation mechanism, rolling multiple earmarked levies into one charge on assessable profits, with the aim of simplifying compliance and improving collection efficiency.

    Deloitte’s tax update on the reform package described the measure as an “introduction of 4% development levy to replace the Tertiary Education Tax and various levies,” stressing the compliance and administrative simplification angle.

    EY’s highlights of the Nigeria Tax Act 2025 similarly note that Section 59 replaces several earmarked taxes with a unified 4% development levy on assessable profits (with stated exclusions for certain company categories).

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: The test will be whether “consolidation” actually reduces friction for businesses or simply changes the label on compulsory payments. Watch for implementation guidance, agency handovers (who collects what and when), and whether the levy materially affects investment decisions—especially for sectors that previously paid some of the constituent levies at different effective rates.

    Source: The Punch — 14 Dec 2025 (https://punchng.com/fg-eyes-n1-9tn-from-new-2026-development-levy/)

     

    Photo: Twitter/@atikuabagudu

  • FG’s electronic transfer levy revenue doubles to N360bn

    FG’s electronic transfer levy revenue doubles to N360bn

    Federal revenue from the electronic money transfer levy hit about N360.29 billion between January and October 2025, more than doubling the comparable 2024 figure, according to an internal FIRS document cited by Punch. The year-on-year jump suggests increased taxable transfer volumes and/or stronger compliance, with the report noting monthly gains across the period. The data adds another angle to ongoing debates about the balance between broadening non-oil revenue and the public sensitivity around transaction-related taxes. Source: Punch, December 7, 2025.

  • FG Apologises For Asking Nigerians To Re-Register Details With Bank, Others

    FG Apologises For Asking Nigerians To Re-Register Details With Bank, Others

    The Federal Government of Nigeria has apologised for its directive that all account holders in the nation’s financial institutions to register their details despite the Bank Verification Number (BVN) and the National Identification Number being held by many Nigerians.

    The Nigerian Federal Government had asked all account holders in banks, including insurance companies, to fill and submit a Self-Confirmation form.

    The FG threatened that failure to comply with the directive would attract an imposition of restriction to bank accounts or monetary penalty.

    However, the Nigerian government in a tweet on Friday apologized for the order,
    to fill another self-confirmation form despite BVN and NIN, which Nigerians have vehemently condemned.

    It tweeted, “We apologise for the misleading tweets (now deleted) that went up yesterday, regarding the completion of self-certification forms by Reportable Persons. The message contained in the @firsNigeria Notice does not apply to everybody. FIRS will issue appropriate clarification shortly.”

    According to a statement it released in Abuja on Friday, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) explained that only “reportable persons” are expected to submit the form.

    “This is to clarify the publication for financial institutions account holders in Nigeria to complete the self-certification form, pursuant to the Income Tax (Common Reporting Standard) Regulations 2019 which is for the fulfilment of Automatic Exchange of Information Requirements.

    “The Self Certification form is basically to be administered on Reportable persons holding accounts in Financial institutions that are regarded as “Reportable Financial Institutions” under the CRS.

    “Reportable persons are often non-residents. And other persons who have a residence for tax purposes in more than one jurisdiction or Country.

    “Financial Institutions are expected to administer the Self Certification form on such account holders when the information at its disposal indicates that the Account holder is a person resident for tax purpose in more than one jurisdiction.

    “The information that indicates an account holder is a resident for tax purposes in more than one jurisdiction, is expected to be available to Financial Institutions during the account opening processes for the KYC and AML purpose.”