Our Expert in Nigeria
No results available
Every foreign company entering Nigeria faces a threshold question: incorporate a local subsidiary, typically a private limited-liability company (LLC), or register a branch of the parent entity? The answer shapes liability exposure, tax treatment, contract eligibility and exit flexibility for years to come. Since 1 January 2026 the stakes have risen: the Nigeria Tax Act 2025 (NTA 2025) consolidated and tightened the country’s tax rules, while the Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act 2025 replaced the former Federal Inland Revenue Service with a more assertive tax administration. For most foreign investors choosing a structure in Nigeria in 2026, a subsidiary delivers superior risk containment, clearer tax treatment and broader commercial access.
A branch should be treated as exceptional, available only where a specific sector law permits it and the parent accepts direct, unlimited liability.
A Nigerian subsidiary is a company incorporated under the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) and registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC). It is a separate legal person from its foreign parent. The parent holds shares, typically as majority or sole shareholder, but the subsidiary’s debts and obligations belong to the subsidiary alone, subject to narrow exceptions for fraud, wrongful trading or personal guarantees given by directors. At least one director must be a Nigerian resident, and the company must maintain a registered office address within Nigeria.
Incorporating a subsidiary requires CAC name-reservation, filing of memorandum and articles of association, payment of stamp duties, and provision of directors’ and shareholders’ details (including National Identification Numbers for Nigerian-resident directors). Working with experienced solicitors, the standard CAC incorporation process takes approximately two to six weeks from the date complete documents are lodged, though regulated sectors may require additional licensing that extends the timeline.
Does a subsidiary need to be registered? Yes, it must be incorporated at the CAC before it can lawfully carry on business in Nigeria. There is no exemption for wholly foreign-owned entities.
A branch is not a separate legal entity. It is an extension of the foreign parent company. Every obligation the branch incurs is an obligation of the parent, enforceable against parent-company assets worldwide. The branch has no shareholders, no independent board and no equity to transfer. Its financial statements are a subset of the parent’s accounts, though Nigerian filing and audit obligations still apply.
Under CAMA, a foreign company that intends to carry on business in Nigeria must take steps to incorporate a local company, unless a specific exemption applies. In practice, non-resident companies are generally discouraged from operating through branches. PwC’s practitioner guidance on Nigerian branch income confirms that branches face restricted treatment and enhanced administrative scrutiny under the current regulatory framework. Post-2025, the combination of NTA 2025 tightening and NRS enforcement powers has made the branch route even narrower. Industry observers expect the NRS to challenge branch structures more aggressively where a subsidiary is the expected norm.
Branches remain viable in a small number of regulated niches, typically where a sector regulator explicitly contemplates a branch presence (for example, certain international banking operations licensed by the Central Bank of Nigeria, or specific upstream petroleum activities under the Petroleum Industry Act). Outside these niches, the pros and cons of a branch office rarely favour the branch: unlimited parent liability, higher audit intensity and limited commercial flexibility outweigh the marginally simpler initial paperwork. Fintech founders, for instance, are better served by incorporation, see our guide on setting up a fintech company in Nigeria.
The table below summarises the ten dimensions that matter most when choosing between a subsidiary and a branch in Nigeria. Use it as a quick-reference decision map before drilling into the detailed analysis that follows.
| Dimension | Subsidiary (LLC) | Branch Office |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status | Separate Nigerian legal person; parent is shareholder; at least one resident director required | Extension of foreign parent; not a separate legal person |
| Liability | Limited to subsidiary’s assets (subject to guarantees or fraud exceptions) | Parent company directly and unlimitedly liable for branch obligations |
| Tax treatment | Taxed as Nigerian resident company at applicable CIT rate on worldwide income sourced in Nigeria | Non-resident taxed on Nigeria-source profits at comparable rate; heightened enforcement risk under NTA 2025 |
| Withholding and repatriation | Dividends subject to WHT; formal repatriation via dividends or intercompany loans | Branch profit transfers attract WHT reporting; repatriation may face additional NRS scrutiny |
| Regulatory approvals | Standard CAC incorporation; sector licences where required (CBN, NNPC, NCC, etc.) | CAC branch registration (where permitted); sector approvals required; certain sectors prohibit branches |
| Local content and ownership rules | Can accommodate Nigerian equity participation; compliant with local content legislation | No local equity participation possible; may not satisfy local content requirements |
| Setup cost and timeline | Higher upfront (incorporation fees, share capital); 2–6 weeks typical | Lower initial paperwork (if permitted); timeline depends on sector approvals |
| Ongoing compliance | Annual audited accounts, CAC annual returns, corporate governance obligations | Nigerian filings required; parent financials may be scrutinised; higher audit intensity |
| Enforceability and dispute resolution | Contracts executed by a Nigerian entity; enforceable in Nigerian courts and arbitration seats | Contracts attributed to foreign parent; enforceability depends on cross-border rules and service of process |
| Exit and sale | Transferable equity; share sale, asset sale or winding-up available | Closure requires cross-border filings and withdrawal; conversion to subsidiary often more practical |
The comparison makes a clear pattern visible: the subsidiary wins on almost every dimension that matters for a long-term, liability-conscious foreign investor. The branch is competitive only on initial setup simplicity, an advantage that erodes quickly once compliance obligations and enforcement risks are factored in.
Tax treatment is the dimension foreign investors ask about first, and the one most affected by the 2026 reforms. Both structures are taxable on Nigeria-source profits, but the administrative and risk profiles differ materially.
| Item | Subsidiary (LLC) | Branch Office |
|---|---|---|
| Company Income Tax (CIT) | Taxed as a Nigerian resident company at the headline rate of 30 % on assessable profits (small-company turnover bands and minimum-tax provisions under NTA 2025 may reduce the effective rate for qualifying entities) | Non-resident company taxed on Nigeria-source profits at a comparable rate; branches face enhanced scrutiny under NTA 2025 and are generally discouraged |
| Withholding taxes (payments to non-residents) | WHT applies on royalties, interest, dividends and certain service fees leaving Nigeria; rates set by NTA 2025 and applicable double-taxation agreements | Same WHT regime applies; branch profit repatriation also subject to WHT reporting obligations |
| VAT / indirect taxes | Must register for VAT if providing taxable supplies; input VAT recovery available to resident companies | Must register for VAT on taxable supplies; treatment mirrors resident suppliers but administrative links to parent add complexity |
| Transfer pricing | Must maintain contemporaneous TP documentation; NTA 2025 expanded documentation expectations | Branch–parent transactions scrutinised for arm’s-length pricing; documentation required |
| Compliance cost (annual estimate) | Higher baseline (local tax returns, audited financial statements, board governance costs) | Potentially lower filing volume but higher compliance risk and audit intensity from NRS; total cost can exceed subsidiary costs in enforcement-heavy years |
The practical takeaway: on tax alone, neither structure offers a clear rate advantage, both pay CIT at comparable rates. The difference is administrative risk. A subsidiary sits cleanly within the Nigerian resident-company tax system. A branch invites additional NRS scrutiny, more complex WHT reporting on profit repatriation, and potential disputes over profit attribution, all of which translate to higher advisory costs and audit exposure.
Incorporating a subsidiary involves CAC filing fees, stamp duties on share capital, and professional fees for solicitors and company secretaries. Sector-specific licences (CBN, NNPC, NCC) carry separate charges. The total upfront cost is higher than branch registration, but annual compliance costs for a well-run subsidiary are predictable: audited accounts, CAC annual returns and tax filings follow a fixed calendar.
A branch’s initial registration cost is lower, there is no share capital to stamp, and CAC paperwork for branch registration (where permitted) is lighter. However, the ongoing cost picture is deceptive. Enhanced NRS audit attention, the need to reconcile branch accounts with parent financials, and the risk of retrospective tax assessments can make a branch materially more expensive in years two through five. Investors focused on e-commerce operations should also consider the broader regulatory landscape outlined in our piece on e-commerce in Nigeria, legal framework and challenges.
This dimension is the clearest differentiator between the LLC option and going the branch route in Nigeria. A subsidiary’s debts are the subsidiary’s alone. Creditors cannot pursue the foreign parent’s assets unless they can pierce the corporate veil, a high legal bar under Nigerian law that requires proof of fraud, improper purpose or deliberate undercapitalisation.
A branch offers no such protection. Every contract signed, every tort committed and every tax assessment issued against the branch is enforceable against the parent company’s global assets. For capital-intensive sectors, energy, infrastructure, telecommunications, this exposure is unacceptable for most boards and lenders.
Both structures require CAC filings. A subsidiary follows the standard incorporation path, name search, filing of incorporation documents, issuance of a certificate of incorporation. Sector-specific licences layer on top: a fintech company needs CBN or SEC approval; an upstream petroleum operator needs NNPC and NUPRC authorisation. See our practical checklist on how to obtain an IMTO licence from the Central Bank of Nigeria for one example of sector-specific licensing.
A branch must register with the CAC as a foreign company, but sector regulators may refuse to issue the operating licence a branch needs. In banking, the CBN generally requires a locally incorporated subsidiary for full-service operations. In petroleum, the Petroleum Industry Act and associated local content rules presuppose a Nigerian company. The practical effect is that many investors who start exploring the branch option discover they must incorporate a subsidiary anyway to obtain the necessary sectoral permits.
Contracts executed by a Nigerian subsidiary are governed by Nigerian law and enforceable in Nigerian courts or in arbitration seated in Nigeria. Service of process is straightforward, the subsidiary has a registered office and local directors. Foreign investors exploring investment opportunities in Nigeria’s petroleum industry will find that joint-venture partners and government agencies strongly prefer contracting with a Nigerian entity.
Contracts signed by a branch raise immediate questions: is the counterparty the branch or the foreign parent? Which jurisdiction’s courts have jurisdiction? How is process served on a foreign company? These ambiguities complicate enforcement, delay dispute resolution and increase legal costs. Arbitration clauses can mitigate some risk, but the underlying structural uncertainty remains.
A subsidiary can be incorporated in approximately two to six weeks with complete documentation. Exiting is flexible: the parent can sell shares, admit a co-investor, wind up the subsidiary, or convert it into a different entity type.
Registering a branch may be faster in some cases, but closing a branch is cumbersome, it requires CAC de-registration, final tax clearances, cross-border coordination with the parent’s home-jurisdiction registrar and, often, a retrospective audit by the NRS. Many foreign companies that initially registered branches have found that converting to a subsidiary is simpler than closing the branch outright.
The Nigeria Tax Act 2025 consolidated several legacy tax statutes into a single framework, redefining key concepts, including who qualifies as a “resident” company and what constitutes a taxable presence. The Act reinforces the expectation that foreign companies carrying on business in Nigeria will do so through a locally incorporated entity. For branches, this means tighter definitions, more aggressive profit-attribution rules and a higher probability of challenge by the new Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), which replaced the Federal Inland Revenue Service under the Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act 2025.
The NRS has been given expanded powers of assessment, enforcement and information-gathering. Early indications suggest the NRS is prioritising non-resident structures, including branches, for compliance audits. KPMG’s analysis of the NTA 2025 highlights the broadened scope of taxable-presence definitions and the tightened transfer-pricing documentation requirements that apply equally to subsidiaries and branches. EY’s tax alert on the NTA 2025 similarly flags the enhanced enforcement environment as a key risk for foreign entities that rely on older, less formalised market-entry structures.
The combined effect: a foreign investor choosing between a subsidiary vs branch in Nigeria in 2026 faces a regulatory environment that clearly favours incorporation. The branch option is not categorically unlawful, but it is restricted, disfavoured and enforcement-heavy. Any investor considering a branch should confirm, in writing, that the relevant sector regulator permits it, and should budget for significantly higher compliance and advisory costs.
Use the following framework to match your circumstances to the right foreign investor Nigeria structure. Each bullet is a trigger condition, if it applies, follow the recommendation.
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Limited liability / risk containment | Subsidiary (LLC) |
| Government contract eligibility | Subsidiary (LLC) |
| Tax simplicity and audit defence | Subsidiary (LLC) |
| Long-term presence (5+ years) | Subsidiary (LLC) |
| Fastest possible initial setup (narrow, sector-approved activity only) | Branch (confirm legality first) |
| Equity flexibility / exit optionality | Subsidiary (LLC) |
Engaging qualified Nigerian counsel before committing to a structure saves time, money and regulatory risk. Retain a lawyer when any of the following conditions apply:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Theo Osanakpo at Dr. T.C Osanakpo & CO, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 3 minutes ago
posted 26 minutes ago
posted 49 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message