Nigeria’s New Tax Reform Bill- Review

SpringHill Capital

May 19, 2025

Our latest report analyzes Nigeria’s 2025 Tax Reform Bill, outlining key shifts in corporate tax, digital compliance, and VAT redistribution while unpacking what this means for investors navigating sector opportunities and fiscal realignment.

  • Simplified Tax System: The bill unifies tax laws and introduces digital compliance tools and faster dispute resolution.
  • Lower CIT, Smarter VAT: CIT drops to 27.5%, while VAT redistribution rewards high-consumption states like Lagos and Rivers.
  • Sector-Specific Gains: Manufacturing, fintech, retail, and tax tech stand to benefit most; investors should reallocate accordingly.

In May 2025, Nigeria passed the Nigeria Tax Bill a transformative piece of legislation aimed at overhauling the country’s tax structure. This reform consolidates existing tax laws into a unified framework and introduces changes that are designed to streamline compliance, improve transparency, and strengthen revenue allocation mechanisms. For businesses and investors, the Nigeria Tax Bill marks a shift toward a more competitive, rules-based fiscal environment with clearer incentives and fewer barriers to growth.

• Stimulate local production

• Reduce import dependency, and

• Restore national economic sovereignty.

The announcement comes at a crucial time. Despite having untapped capacity across sectors like sugar, textiles, and steel, Nigeria still relies heavily on imports. The new policy challenges this by mandating that public funds prioritize local industry foreign procurement and will only be allowed if no viable Nigerian alternative exists. More than a procurement reform, this is a strategic move to reshape Nigeria’s economy, boost jobs, and build self-reliance. The Attorney General has been directed to draft an executive order to give the policy full legal force.

CategoryPre-20252025 Tax Bill
1) Legal StructureFragmented, multiple overlapping laws.Consolidated under Nigeria Tax Bill
2) Revised Procurement Guidelines: 30%27.5% (2025), 25% (2026)
3) VAT Rate 7.5%7.5% (unchanged)
4) VAT Sharing Formula15% Fed, 50% States, 35% LGs10% Fed, 55% States, 35% LGs; 30% based on
consumption
5) Taxpayer IdentificationInconsistent, state-dependent TINsUnified TIN system
6) Compliance ProcessManual, paper-basedDigital-first filing, centralized systems
7) Dispute ResolutionCourt-based, slowTax Appeal Tribunal and Ombud for timely
resolution
8) Investor Risk ProfileHigh uncertaintyStronger clarity, faster compliance, improved
ROI predictability

At the heart of the Nigeria Tax Bill is the consolidation of various overlapping tax statutes into a single legal
framework. This shift eliminates ambiguities that have long plagued corporate taxpayers and investors,
offering a unified structure for obligations across corporate income tax, VAT, and personal taxation. The bill
introduces a unified Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN), digital-first filing processes, and faster resolution
mechanisms through a Tax Appeal Tribunal and the Office of the Tax Ombud. These structural changes aim to
reduce bureaucratic friction and create a more transparent audit trail, aligning Nigeria with global best
practices.

  • Unified legal framework consolidating multiple tax laws
  • Mandatory unified TIN system
  • Digital-first filing and compliance tools
  • Establishment of Tax Appeal Tribunal and Ombud office

The bill significantly reduces Company Income Tax (CIT) from 30% to 27.5% in 2025, with a further cut to 25%
planned for 2026. This positions Nigeria as more fiscally attractive compared to many emerging markets,
particularly for multinationals evaluating regional headquarters or reinvestment strategies. Although the VAT
rate remains at 7.5%, the revenue sharing formula has been revised. Now, 30% of VAT will be allocated based
on actual state-level consumption a change that rewards economically active states and provides incentives
for states to stimulate commerce.

The Nigeria Tax Bill opens clear value pathways for portfolio investors, particularly in sectors sensitive to
margin improvement, operational scale, and regional consumption trends. With the CIT now at 27.5% and set
to fall to 25% investors can expect improved after-tax earnings and re-rated valuations across multiple
industries.
The table below outlines key sectors poised to benefit, the reasons why, and how investors can position
accordingly

Sector BenefitsPositioning Strategy
1) Manufacturing & IndustrialsCIT reduction increases reinvestment capacity and net marginsTarget mid-cap industrials in Lagos, Rivers, Ogun
2) Retail & FMCGHigh VAT allocations to consumer hubs boost demand and logisticsAllocate to firms with strong distribution in VAT leading states
3) Fintech & SaaS Simplified digital tax systems support scalable platformsBack compliant FinTech’s and scalable B2B SaaS ventures
4) VAT Sharing FormulaUnified TIN and lower tax friction ease nationwide operationsFocus on asset-light logistics and delivery infrastructure
5) Taxpayer IdentificationDigital compliance mandates drive
demand for automation tools
Invest in tax filing, audit, and ERP solution startups

Q1 2025 data from the Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX) reflects activity in the domestic equities market,
offering a focused view of how portfolio investors are responding to recent reforms including the new Tax
Bill:

Total foreign transactions in the Nigerian equities market hit ₦814.05 billion in Q1 2025, already 96% of 2024’s full-year total (₦852.03 billion). March alone saw foreign trades dominate the market (63% of total volume), showing foreign funds are actively engaged but not necessarily settled.

Foreign Portfolio Outflows (FPI) from equities also jumped to ₦420.37 billion a 251% year-on-year increase. This reflects ongoing concerns around FX volatility, policy execution, and macro stability, despite improved entry signals.

Foreign Portfolio Inflows (FPI) in equities rose sharply to ₦393.68 billion, up 322% from ₦93.37 billion in Q1 2024. This surge suggests short-term investors are responding positively to fiscal clarity, market liberalization, and corporate tax reductions.

Net FPI in equities stood at a deficit of ₦26.69 billion for the quarter serving as a clear indicator that capital flight exceeded capital entry despite reform momentum. This duality strong inflows and strong outflows paints a picture of confidence in opportunity, tempered by nervousness about staying power. It underscores the role of the tax reform as a catalyst, but not a cure-all.

For investors, this is not just a fiscal policy update,  it’s a structural realignment that makes Nigeria’s economy more predictable and investable. By reducing friction and rewarding growth, the Tax Bill lays the groundwork for durable, long-term capital flows. For forward-looking investors, the message is clear: recalibrate, reallocate, and engage early.

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