Tag: tax compliance

  • Nigerian Banks to Enforce Mandatory Tax ID for All Account Operations

    Nigerian Banks to Enforce Mandatory Tax ID for All Account Operations

    In an update published by Channels TV, Nigerian commercial banks have begun the full enforcement of mandatory Tax Identification Numbers (TIN) for both new and existing account holders. This policy, which stems from the new tax reforms, requires every individual and business to link their bank accounts with their tax records. Failure to comply will result in restricted access to banking services, including transfers and withdrawals, as the government seeks to widen the tax net and track illicit financial flows.

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the FIRS have collaborated on a unified platform that allows for real-time verification of tax IDs. Bank officials have urged customers to update their records immediately to avoid being locked out of the financial system. The policy is also aimed at identifying high-net-worth individuals who have previously evaded taxes while moving large sums of money through the banking sector.

    The enforcement was also documented by The Nation and Vanguard. The Nation reported that “banks have seen a surge in customers visiting branches to link their TINs,” while Vanguard noted that “the move is expected to significantly boost the government’s non-oil revenue.”

    Echotitbits take:

    This is the “no-escape” phase of Nigeria’s tax reform. By linking TIN to bank accounts, the government can now monitor income versus lifestyle in real-time. Watch for a rise in fintech usage and “under-the-mattress” cash holdings as some small businesses try to avoid the digital tax footprint.

    Source: Facebook – https://web.facebook.com/ReportYourself/posts/nigerian-govt-set-make-tax-identification-number-mandatory-for-bank-accounts-fro/1421006479380864/?_rdc=1&_rdr#, January 31, 2026

    Photo credit: Facebook

  • Revenue Service Pushes E-Invoicing as New System Integrators Get Accreditation

    Revenue Service Pushes E-Invoicing as New System Integrators Get Accreditation

    A report from The Punch indicates the National Revenue Service (NRS) has accredited new system integration partners to support automated e-invoicing, a move aimed at improving compliance and reducing leakages.

    The initiative is designed to let businesses connect accounting systems to national tax infrastructure, enabling real-time transaction data and more accurate VAT assessments.

    SMEs are being encouraged to adopt compliant solutions early to avoid penalties once enforcement tightens.

    **Echotitbits take:** E-invoicing can cut fraud and boost transparency, but adoption will be toughest for small businesses. Watch for a grace period, incentives, and clear onboarding support so compliance doesn’t become another cost shock.
    Source : The Punch — https://punchng.com/nrs-boosts-e-invoicing-compliance-with-pillarcraft-accreditation/ 2026-01-08

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • Sokoto begins strict enforcement of monthly tax filing with penalties for defaulters

    Sokoto begins strict enforcement of monthly tax filing with penalties for defaulters

    Figures cited by Punch show Sokoto State’s revenue service is pushing full compliance on monthly tax filings for taxable persons starting January 2026, warning that penalties will apply for non-compliance.

    The policy is positioned as a compliance reset—bringing more individuals and businesses into regular filing, tightening documentation, and strengthening the state’s ability to plan and enforce revenue rules.

    The enforcement angle extends to public contracting, where tax registration is expected to become a more visible compliance gate for suppliers.

    For SMEs and informal operators, the practical issue is capacity: monthly filing needs simple processes and predictable treatment to avoid turning compliance into harassment.

    Punch also highlighted an enforcement detail that statutory bodies or companies awarding contracts to unregistered persons risk a “₦5 million” penalty. Another Punch recap echoed the state IRS announced “full enforcement of compulsory monthly tax filings.”

    Echotitbits take: This succeeds only if enforcement is paired with ease—online filing, helpdesks, clear templates, and dispute resolution. Watch whether the net broadens or the pressure just shifts to already-compliant taxpayers.

    Source: Punch – https://punchng.com/sokoto-irs-begins-enforcement-of-compulsory-monthly-tax-filings/  January 7, 2026
    Punch January 7, 2026

    Photo Credit: Punch Newspapers

  • Kwara passes harmonised taxes bill to curb multiple levies and boost collections

    Kwara passes harmonised taxes bill to curb multiple levies and boost collections

    2025-12-31 09:35:00

    Reporting by The Nation indicates the Kwara State House of Assembly has passed a harmonised taxes and levies bill aimed at streamlining revenue collection and reducing multiple taxation across the state.

    Lawmakers said the legislation is designed to clarify approved charges, cut leakages, and improve compliance for businesses and residents, with next steps focused on transmitting a clean copy for executive assent.

    The move aligns with broader sub‑national efforts to expand internally generated revenue while keeping the tax environment predictable for investors.

    New Telegraph reported the assembly “passes harmonised taxes, levies bill into law,” while Western Post also said lawmakers “pass Harmonised Taxes and Levies Bill into law.”

    Echotitbits take: Harmonisation only works if enforcement is disciplined—no parallel ‘task forces’ or informal collectors. Watch implementation rules, dispute‑resolution mechanisms, and how the state balances revenue goals with SME survival in 2026.

    Source: The Nation — December 31, 2025 (https://thenationonlineng.net/kwara-assembly-passes-harmonised-taxes-levies-bill-into-law/)

    The Nation December 31, 2025

    Photo Credit: The Nation

  • Tinubu doubles down: Nigeria’s new tax laws kick off January 1

    Tinubu doubles down: Nigeria’s new tax laws kick off January 1

    2025-12-31 08:00:00

    According to PUNCH, President Bola Tinubu said the new tax laws will begin on January 1, 2026, insisting the government is moving ahead despite lingering debate around implementation and potential pushback from some quarters.

    The presidency’s line is that the reforms are designed to modernise the tax system, widen the base, and improve collection efficiency—while reducing leakages and uncertainty that have long weakened fiscal planning.

    Officials also framed the rollout as part of a broader reform bundle meant to stabilise the economy and strengthen public finances, with the administration urging stakeholders to focus on execution rather than delay.

    Premium Times also reported Tinubu calling the reforms a “once-in-a-generation opportunity,” while Reuters quoted him saying “No substantial issue should cause us to renege on a programme that will benefit our economy.”

    Validation: Premium Times said “once-in-a-generation opportunity” and Reuters reported “No substantial issue should cause us to renege on a programme that will benefit our economy.”

    Echotitbits take: This is the kind of policy moment where the headline is easy, but the real story is implementation. Watch for the early guidance notes, compliance timelines, and how disputes (if any) are resolved without undermining confidence.

    Source: Lindaikejisblog — 31 December 2025 (https://www.lindaikejisblog.com/2025/12/president-tinubu-insists-new-tax-law-to-commence-january-1-2026.html)

    Lindaikejisblog 31 December 2025

    Photo Credit: Lindaikejisblog

  • Tax reform countdown: Manufacturers upbeat as Labour and SMEs warn of backlash

    Tax reform countdown: Manufacturers upbeat as Labour and SMEs warn of backlash

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-28 09:00:00

    Reporting by Punch indicates Nigeria’s new tax reform laws are still slated to take effect on January 1, 2026, despite widening pushback from some labour and SME stakeholders.

    Industry groups say the package could simplify compliance and reduce distortions, while critics argue implementation timing and transparency concerns around the final gazetted text could trigger new disputes.

    Government-linked reform advocates have framed the rollout as a shift toward fairness—targeting relief for most workers and smaller firms—while signalling willingness to fix drafting or referencing issues through the legislature without shifting the start date.

    Channels Television quoted committee chairman Taiwo Oyedele saying, “The implication of not implementing the new tax laws by January 1, 2026, is that the bottom 98 per cent of workers remain overtaxed.” AIT Live also reported the government “has affirmed that there will be no reversal in the planned implementation… scheduled to take effect on January 1, 2026.”

    Echotitbits take: The political test is whether implementation becomes a trust-building exercise (clear gazette, plain-language guidance, phased enforcement) or another elite policy fight. Watch the National Assembly’s re‑gazetting process and how quickly tax authorities publish compliance guides for SMEs.

    Source: The Punch — December 28, 2025 (https://punchng.com/four-days-to-tax-reform-manufacturers-excited-labour-smes-threaten-revolt/)

    The Punch 2025-12-28

  • FIRS Taps PwC to Help Businesses Plug Into Mandatory E-Invoicing Regime

    FIRS Taps PwC to Help Businesses Plug Into Mandatory E-Invoicing Regime

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-26 06:30:00

    Figures cited by *PUNCH* show Nigeria’s tax authority is accelerating its push into transaction-level digital reporting, with PwC Nigeria accredited to support integration into the Monitoring, Billing and Settlement (MBS) platform that underpins mandatory e-invoicing.

    The move signals a shift from retrospective filings toward near real-time validation, placing new compliance and systems demands on corporates, SMEs, and high-volume retail sectors that issue invoices at scale.

    For businesses, the operational implication is clear: e-invoicing becomes a systems-and-controls project—touching ERPs, point-of-sale, audit trails, and data governance—rather than a “tax department only” problem.

    The policy aim is broader transparency and reduced leakage, but the transition could be bumpy for firms with weak digitisation or inconsistent record-keeping.

    *THISDAY* quoted PwC’s Chijioke Uwaegbute saying, “e-Invoicing embeds tax compliance directly into everyday business activity,” while *BusinessDay* noted the regime “requires invoices to be authenticated at source,” reinforcing that integration is becoming a regulatory necessity, not a technical extra.

    Echotitbits take: Nigeria is moving toward the global direction of continuous transaction controls. The big watch item is execution—clarity of timelines, sandbox testing, cost burden on SMEs, and whether enforcement is paired with support to avoid a compliance shock.

    Source: The Punch — Dec 26, 2025 (https://punchng.com/firs-accredits-pwc-as-system-integrator-for-e-invoicing/)

    Photo credit/source: The Punch
    The Punch 2025-12-26