A New Dawn for Nigerian Taxpayers
From 1 January 2026, the Federal Government’s new Tax Reform Laws will introduce an unprecedented wave of tax exemptions and reliefs designed to ease the financial burden on low-income earners, average taxpayers, and small businesses.
The reform marks a shift towards a fairer and more inclusive tax system encouraging compliance while protecting the most vulnerable Nigerians.
Below is a breakdown of key relief measures and exemptions across different tax categories.
PERSONAL INCOME TAX (PAYE)
- Individuals earning the national minimum wage or less will be fully exempt.
- Annual gross income up to ₦1.2 million (≈ ₦800,000 taxable income) — exempt.
- Reduced PAYE rates for individuals earning up to ₦20 million annually.
- Gifts received by individuals exempt from tax.
Allowable Deductions and Reliefs
Taxpayers can continue to enjoy deductions for:
- Pension contributions (PFA)
- National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS)
- National Housing Fund (NHF) contributions
- Interest on owner-occupied housing loans
- Life insurance or annuity premiums
- Rent relief: 20% of annual rent (up to ₦500,000)
Pensions and Gratuities
- Pension funds and assets under the Pension Reform Act (PRA) remain tax-exempt.
- Pension, gratuity, or other retirement benefits granted in line with PRA exempt.
- Compensation for loss of employment up to ₦50 million exempt.
CAPITAL GAINS TAX (CGT)
To encourage asset ownership and investment, the following are exempt from CGT:
- Sale of an owner-occupied residential property
- Personal effects or chattels worth up to ₦5 million
- Sale of up to two private vehicles per year
- Gains on shares below ₦150 million annually or gains up to ₦10 million
- Reinvested gains above the exemption threshold
- Pension funds, charitable and religious institutions (non-commercial activities)
COMPANIES INCOME TAX (CIT)
Businesses are set to gain major reliefs:
- Small companies (turnover ≤ ₦100 million; fixed assets ≤ ₦250 million) — 0% tax rate
- Eligible startups formally labeled under the reform — CIT-exempt
- Compensation relief: 50% additional deduction for wage increases, bonuses, or transport subsidies granted to low-income staff
- Employment relief: 50% deduction on salaries of new employees retained for at least three years
- Agriculture sector: Five-year tax holiday for crop, livestock, and dairy production
- Startup investment relief: Gains from investments made by venture capitalists, private equity funds, accelerators, or incubators, exempt
DEVELOPMENT LEVY
- Small companies will no longer pay the 4% development levy.
WITHHOLDING TAX (WHT)
- Small businesses, manufacturers, and agric enterprises are exempt from WHT on their income.
- Payments to suppliers by small companies are also exempt from deduction.
VALUE ADDED TAX (VAT)
In a bid to support essential consumption and productive sectors:
- Basic food items — 0% VAT
- Rent — exempt
- Education and medical services/materials — 0% VAT
- Pharmaceutical products — 0% VAT
- Small companies (≤ ₦100 million turnover) — exempt from charging VAT
- Diesel, petrol, and solar energy equipment — VAT suspended/exempt
- Refundable VAT on assets and inputs used to produce VAT-exempt or 0% goods/services
- Agricultural inputs — fertilizers, seeds, seedlings, feeds, and live animals — exempt
- Purchase, lease, or hire of agricultural machinery — exempt
- Disability aids (wheelchairs, hearing aids, braille materials) — exempt
- Shared passenger transport (non-charter) — exempt
- Electric vehicles and parts — exempt
- Humanitarian supplies, baby products, and sanitary materials — exempt
- Land and building transactions — exempt
STAMP DUTIES
The following transactions will no longer attract stamp duty:
- Electronic money transfers below ₦10,000
- Salary payments
- Intra-bank transfers
- Transfer of government securities and shares
- All documents for transfer of stocks and shares