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Nigeria 2026 corporate tax compliance checklist

Nigeria 2026 Corporate Tax Compliance Checklist: 10 Practical Steps for Gcs and Cfos

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Nigeria’s consolidated 2026 tax reform represents the most significant overhaul of the country’s fiscal framework in decades, with the Nigeria Tax Act, the Tax Administration Act, the Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act, and the Joint Revenue Board (Establishment) Act all taking effect from 1 January 2026. For general counsel, chief financial officers and company directors, these changes create immediate obligations spanning registration, filing, withholding, capital gains tax and cross-border reporting. This Nigeria 2026 corporate tax compliance checklist distils the reforms into ten practical, prioritised steps, each with clear ownership, deadlines and templated language, so that in-house legal and finance teams can act decisively and avoid the steep penalties introduced by the new regime.

For broader commercial context on how these reforms reshape the business environment, see the Nigeria 2026 Tax Reform Commercial Impact analysis.

Executive Summary: The 10-Step Corporate Tax Compliance Checklist

The following quick-action list summarises every step detailed in this guide. Use it as a dashboard for tracking implementation across legal and finance functions.

  1. Confirm tax identity and registrations. Verify TIN validity, CIT registration and VAT status on the FIRS portal. Owner: CFO / Tax Manager.
  2. Update the filing calendar and procedures. Map all returns to the new electronic-filing cadence and agent-notification rules. Owner: CFO / Head of Tax.
  3. Rework payroll and PAYE operations. Recalculate employee deductions under revised personal-income-tax thresholds and update payroll systems. Owner: CFO / HR Director.
  4. Re-map withholding taxes, VAT and indirect tax workflows. Align payables processes with updated WHT schedules and new VAT invoicing requirements. Owner: CFO / Accounts Payable Lead.
  5. Review capital gains tax exposure on disposals. Audit the asset register and model CGT on planned divestments or reorganisations. Owner: GC / CFO jointly.
  6. Refresh M&A due diligence checklists and transaction documents. Insert new tax representations, warranties, indemnity waterfall clauses and escrow provisions. Owner: GC / External Counsel.
  7. Amend governance documents and commercial contracts. Pass board resolutions adopting revised tax policies; update change-of-law and gross-up clauses. Owner: GC / Company Secretary.
  8. Strengthen data, record-keeping and transfer pricing documentation. Prepare master and local files, assess permanent-establishment risk, and comply with information-exchange obligations. Owner: CFO / TP Specialist.
  9. Plan remediation and dispute strategy for prior years. Identify voluntary-disclosure opportunities and draft responses to outstanding FIRS notices. Owner: GC / External Tax Adviser.
  10. Launch training, assign owners and set a 90/180/360-day roadmap. Embed compliance KPIs into management dashboards and schedule recurring training. Owner: GC + CFO jointly.

What Changed: Concise Legal Summary of the 2026 Tax Reform in Nigeria

The 2026 tax reform Nigeria has undergone consolidates multiple legacy statutes into a coherent framework designed to widen the tax net, simplify administration and increase revenue. The reforms were enacted by the National Assembly and signed into law in late 2025, with all principal Acts commencing on 1 January 2026.

The Four Principal Acts

  • Nigeria Tax Act (NTA). Consolidates the substantive rules for corporate income tax, personal income tax, capital gains tax and related levies into a single statute, replacing several overlapping laws.
  • Tax Administration Act (TAA). Governs assessment, collection, enforcement, penalties, taxpayer rights and information-exchange powers, effectively the procedural backbone of the new regime.
  • Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act. Re-establishes and expands the powers of the federal revenue authority (successor to FIRS), including broader audit, data-access and digital-enforcement capabilities.
  • Joint Revenue Board (Establishment) Act. Creates the institutional framework for coordination between federal and state tax authorities, addressing multi-level taxation and allocation of revenues.

Key Administrative Changes

The Tax Administration Act 2026 introduces mandatory electronic filing for all corporate taxpayers, tightens record-retention periods, and establishes a strengthened penalty and interest regime for late filing and under-declaration. Information-sharing provisions now empower the revenue authority to access third-party financial data, making voluntary compliance and accurate self-assessment more critical than ever.

Act Effective Date Immediate Practical Impact
Nigeria Tax Act (NTA) 1 January 2026 New CIT, CGT and PIT rates and computation rules; revised exemption thresholds
Tax Administration Act (TAA) 1 January 2026 Mandatory e-filing; enhanced penalties; broader FIRS data-access powers
Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act 1 January 2026 Expanded audit authority; digital enforcement tools
Joint Revenue Board (Establishment) Act 1 January 2026 Federal–state tax coordination; revised revenue allocation rules

Step 1: Confirm Tax Identity and Registrations

The foundation of any corporate tax compliance checklist is ensuring that the company’s tax identity is accurate and current. Under the new regime, the revenue authority is cross-referencing TIN databases with corporate-affairs records, bank data and other government registries, discrepancies can trigger automatic queries and penalties.

How to Verify TIN and Document the Steps

  • Log in to the FIRS TIN Verification Portal and confirm that the company’s TIN is active, correctly linked to the registered entity name and current address.
  • Cross-check CIT registration status. Ensure the company is registered for corporate income tax and that the tax office assigned matches the principal place of business.
  • Confirm VAT registration thresholds. The reforms adjust turnover thresholds for mandatory VAT registration, verify whether the company (or any subsidiary) now falls within scope.
  • Update taxpayer contact details. Designate a compliance officer and ensure the FIRS portal reflects current email addresses, phone numbers and authorised signatories.
  • Document all verification steps. Create an internal memo recording the date of verification, the portal screenshots taken, and any discrepancies identified for remediation.
Entity Type Key Reporting Obligations (CIT / VAT / PAYE / WHT) Immediate Action (30 Days)
Nigerian private limited company CIT registration; monthly VAT/WHT filings (if applicable); monthly PAYE returns Verify TIN, update e-filing user credentials, reconcile payroll with new PAYE thresholds
Branch of foreign company CIT filing for Nigeria-sourced income; additional NIPC registration requirements Confirm branch registration, assess PE/TP exposure, update statutory books
Non-resident supplier (digital services) VAT registration and collection under new e-services rules Register for VAT if supplying digital services to Nigerian customers, update invoices and contracting terms

Step 2: Update Filing Calendar and Filing Procedures

The Tax Administration Act 2026 mandates electronic filing for all corporate taxpayers and introduces stricter filing cadences. Finance teams must map every return to the revised calendar and ensure that ERP and payroll systems are configured to generate compliant outputs.

Penalties and Interest Changes

Late-filing penalties have been materially increased under the new regime. Industry observers expect the revenue authority to enforce these penalties more aggressively given the broader data-access powers now available. The likely practical effect will be that companies can no longer rely on informal extensions or manual submissions.

Checklist for Finance Teams to Update ERP and Payroll

  • Confirm that accounting software can generate returns in the format prescribed by the FIRS e-filing portal.
  • Update tax-code mapping tables within the ERP to reflect new WHT and VAT rates.
  • Set automated calendar reminders for each return at least 10 business days before the statutory deadline.
  • Designate a backup authorised filer in case the primary tax officer is unavailable.
  • Test the end-to-end e-filing submission process with a dummy return before the first live deadline.
Month Required Return / Filing Owner
January Previous-year CIT self-assessment (provisional); monthly PAYE remittance Head of Tax / Payroll
Monthly (ongoing) VAT return; WHT deduction return; PAYE remittance Accounts Payable / Payroll
June (typically) Annual CIT return and audited financial statements CFO / External Auditor
Quarterly Transfer-pricing disclosure (where applicable); estimated tax instalments TP Specialist / Head of Tax
Year-end Reconciliation of all WHT credits claimed; annual PAYE reconciliation Head of Tax / HR

Step 3: Rework Payroll, PAYE and Employee Communications

The 2026 reforms adjust personal income tax thresholds and relief computations, which directly affect employer PAYE obligations. Every company operating a payroll in Nigeria must recalibrate deductions, update payroll software and communicate changes to employees.

Sample Employee FAQ Notice

Below is templated wording that HR departments can adapt for internal communications:

“Effective 1 January 2026, changes to Nigeria’s tax legislation affect how your Pay-As-You-Earn (PAYE) deductions are calculated. You may notice an adjustment, either upward or downward, in your net pay. The company has updated its payroll systems to comply with the new rates. If you have questions, please contact [HR contact] or attend the information session on [date].”

  • Run parallel payroll calculations (old vs. new) for the first two pay periods to verify accuracy.
  • Update the consolidated relief allowance (CRA) and other statutory reliefs in the payroll engine.
  • Issue revised tax deduction cards or digital equivalents to all employees.
  • Brief line managers so they can field basic questions from their teams.

Step 4: Withholding Taxes, VAT and Indirect Tax Operational Changes

Withholding tax and VAT represent the most operationally intensive elements of the corporate tax compliance checklist because they touch every payment cycle. The 2026 changes affect rates, filing formats and the scope of transactions subject to WHT and VAT.

WHT Remittance Workflow for the Payables Team

  • At invoice receipt, the payables team must classify the payment type and apply the correct WHT rate from the updated schedule.
  • Deduct WHT before payment, issue a WHT credit note to the vendor, and remit the withheld amount to the revenue authority within the prescribed timeframe.
  • For VAT, confirm that all invoices issued by the company include a valid TIN and are formatted in accordance with the revised invoicing rules.
  • Non-resident digital-service providers must now collect and remit VAT, verify that contracts with such providers allocate this obligation clearly.
Payment Type WHT / VAT Treatment Action Required
Professional / consultancy fees WHT applicable at prescribed rate; VAT on services Update vendor master data with current TINs; apply correct WHT code in ERP
Rent payments WHT applicable at prescribed rate Reconcile lease agreements; issue WHT credit notes to landlords
Supply of goods WHT applicable; VAT at standard rate Verify supplier VAT registration; claim input VAT where eligible
Digital services from non-residents VAT collection obligation on supplier (or reverse charge) Amend contracts to clarify VAT allocation; confirm supplier registration

Step 5: Capital Gains Tax and Disposals, What GCs Must Review

The CGT changes Nigeria 2026 introduced under the Nigeria Tax Act require careful attention from general counsel involved in asset disposals, group reorganisations and M&A exits. The reforms adjust the treatment of gains on disposal of shares and certain other assets, potentially increasing the tax cost of transactions that were previously exempt or subject to lower rates.

How to Update Tax Provisions and Accounting Entries

  • Audit the fixed-asset and investment register. Identify assets with unrealised gains that could crystallise CGT on disposal.
  • Model CGT on planned transactions. For any divestment or reorganisation in the pipeline, rerun the financial model with the updated CGT rate and base-cost rules.
  • Review stamp-duty and CIT interplay. Certain disposals may attract both CGT and stamp duty, confirm there is no double charge or, if there is, document the position for future objection.
  • Draft CGT indemnity language for SPAs. Sample proviso: “The Seller shall indemnify the Buyer against any CGT liability arising from the disposal of the Sale Shares to the extent such liability exceeds the CGT provision disclosed in the Completion Accounts.”
  • Update deferred-tax calculations in the financial statements to reflect the new CGT rate applied to temporary differences on qualifying assets.

Step 6: M&A Due Diligence and Transaction Documents, Practical Checklist

For any deal signed or closing after 1 January 2026, M&A due diligence Nigeria 2026 must reflect the new tax landscape. Failing to update diligence scopes and transaction documents exposes buyers to inherited liabilities and sellers to post-completion claims.

Sample Clause Language for Tax Representations

“The Target has complied in all material respects with the provisions of the Nigeria Tax Act 2026 and the Tax Administration Act 2026, including all obligations relating to registration, filing, withholding, remittance and payment of taxes. No notice of assessment, audit or investigation has been issued by the Nigeria Revenue Service or any state revenue authority that remains unresolved as at the date of this Agreement.”

Tax Indemnity Waterfall and Escrow Holdback

Industry observers expect that escrow holdback periods in Nigerian M&A transactions will lengthen as buyers seek protection against tax exposures that may only materialise once the revenue authority exercises its expanded data-access powers. Early indications suggest a market-standard holdback of 12–18 months for tax-specific indemnities, up from the 6–12 months that was common before the reforms.

Due Diligence Item Why It Matters Under the 2026 Reforms Who Checks
TIN validity and CIT registration status Invalid TIN triggers automatic penalties; FIRS can now cross-reference databases Tax adviser / GC
Outstanding assessments, audits or disputes Expanded FIRS powers increase risk of retrospective assessments surfacing post-close GC / External counsel
WHT credit-note reconciliation Unreconciled WHT credits may indicate under-remittance, a contingent liability CFO / Auditor
Transfer-pricing documentation (master/local file) Missing TP documentation attracts penalties; FIRS can adjust pricing and raise assessments TP specialist
VAT registration and filing compliance New e-services rules widen the net; historical non-compliance is discoverable Tax adviser / CFO
Employee PAYE reconciliation Payroll non-compliance creates personal liability for directors under the TAA HR / Payroll lead
CGT exposure on asset/share disposals Updated CGT rules may increase the tax cost of the transaction itself GC / Tax adviser

Step 7: Governance, Board Resolutions and Contracts, What to Amend

Board-level governance must keep pace with the 2026 reforms. Directors face potential personal liability under the Tax Administration Act 2026 for certain failures to remit tax, making it imperative that governance documents and delegated authorities are updated promptly.

Suggested Board Resolution Template

“RESOLVED that the Board adopts the revised Tax Compliance Policy annexed hereto as Appendix [X], incorporating all amendments necessitated by the Nigeria Tax Act 2026 and the Tax Administration Act 2026; AND FURTHER RESOLVED that the Chief Financial Officer is authorised to take all steps necessary to implement the said Policy, including the appointment of tax agents, the filing of returns and the remittance of all taxes in accordance with applicable law.”

  • Update the delegated-authority matrix to specify who may sign tax returns and correspond with the revenue authority.
  • Review all material commercial contracts for change-of-law clauses. Where a contract allocates tax risk (e.g., gross-up clauses, tax-indemnity provisions), verify that the drafting captures the 2026 Acts.
  • Insert a standing tax-compliance agenda item into the quarterly board calendar.

Step 8: Data, Record-Keeping and Transfer Pricing / Cross-Border Issues

The Tax Administration Act 2026 extends record-retention requirements and introduces stricter transfer-pricing documentation triggers. Companies with related-party cross-border transactions must prepare or update master files and local files in line with the new provisions.

Quick Checklist for Cross-Border Payments and Withholding

  • Identify all cross-border payments subject to WHT and verify that the correct rate is applied (including any applicable double-taxation-agreement relief).
  • Assess permanent-establishment risk for foreign group entities with physical or digital presence in Nigeria.
  • Confirm that intercompany pricing is documented and benchmarked, and that the documentation is available for inspection within the timeframe required by the TAA.
  • Review information-exchange obligations, the revenue authority now has broader powers to share data with foreign tax jurisdictions under bilateral and multilateral agreements.
  • Appoint a designated TP compliance officer within the finance team who is responsible for maintaining documentation and responding to revenue-authority queries.

Step 9: Remediation and Disputes, How to Handle Past Years and Audits

The transition to the 2026 regime creates a window of opportunity for companies to remedy prior non-compliance before the revenue authority’s enhanced audit capabilities are fully deployed. A proactive approach to remediation can significantly reduce penalty exposure.

Timeline for Responses and Model Letter Template

  • Self-assessment review. Conduct an internal tax health check covering the three most recent assessment years. Identify any under-declared income, unclaimed reliefs or unremitted withholding taxes.
  • Voluntary disclosure. Where errors are identified, consider a voluntary disclosure to the revenue authority. Industry observers expect that early voluntary disclosures made during 2026 will attract more favourable treatment than disclosures triggered by an audit.
  • Responding to FIRS notices. Under the TAA, taxpayers must respond to assessment notices within the prescribed timeframe. Draft a model acknowledgement letter: “We acknowledge receipt of your Notice of Assessment dated [date], Reference [number]. We are reviewing the assessment and will file our formal objection / response within the period prescribed by the Tax Administration Act 2026. We reserve all rights under the Act, including the right to object and appeal.”
  • Dispute-resolution planning. Map the objection and appeal pathway (administrative review → Tax Appeal Tribunal → Federal High Court) and assign external counsel early in any dispute.

Step 10: Training, Ongoing Monitoring and the 90/180/360-Day Roadmap

Compliance is not a one-time exercise. The final step of this in-house counsel tax action plan is to embed monitoring, training and accountability into everyday operations.

90/180/360-Day Implementation Checklist

  • First 90 days (by end of Q1 2026). Complete TIN verification, update ERP tax codes, run parallel payroll, pass board resolution, brief the executive team and issue employee PAYE notices.
  • By 180 days (mid-year 2026). File the first set of returns under the new regime, complete the M&A diligence template update, finalise TP master/local files, and conduct the first compliance training for finance and legal staff.
  • By 360 days (year-end 2026). Perform a full-year compliance review, reconcile all WHT credits, assess the effectiveness of new processes, report to the board on compliance KPIs, and adjust the action plan for Year 2.

Assign a compliance dashboard with the following minimum fields: return type, due date, filing date, confirmation reference, responsible officer, and status (green / amber / red). Review the dashboard at every monthly finance meeting and escalate any amber or red items to the GC and CFO within 48 hours.

Conclusion: Building Your In-House Counsel Tax Action Plan

The 2026 tax reform Nigeria has enacted is not a distant regulatory possibility, it is live law, and the penalties for non-compliance are materially higher than under the previous regime. This Nigeria 2026 corporate tax compliance checklist gives GCs and CFOs a structured, ten-step roadmap to move from awareness to implementation. The most effective approach is to treat compliance as a cross-functional project: assign clear ownership for each step, set deadlines that align with the 90/180/360-day framework outlined above, and embed tax compliance into board governance and management reporting. Companies operating in the Nigeria, Corporate practice area can find specialist practitioners through the GLE lawyer directory, Nigeria, Corporate to support a 30-day legal and tax health check.

Early action is the most reliable protection against the enhanced enforcement environment that is now in force.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Sanford U. Mba at Dentons ACAS-Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS)
  2. National Assembly / Acts Repository (NASS)
  3. PwC, Nigeria Tax Summaries: Significant Developments
  4. Olaniwun Ajayi LLP, Tax Wrap-Up 2025 / Outlook 2026
  5. Global Law Experts, Nigeria 2026 Tax Reform Commercial Impact
  6. Mondaq, Top Nigerian Tax Compliance Considerations for Boards in 2026
  7. Goldsmiths LLP, NIPC, CAMA and Foreign Entry: The 2026 Compliance Checklist
  8. UseFlexFinance, The Complete 2026 Tax Compliance Checklist for Nigerian SMEs
  9. Olaniwun Ajayi LLP

FAQs

What are the new laws in Nigeria 2026?
Four principal Acts took effect on 1 January 2026: the Nigeria Tax Act, the Tax Administration Act, the Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act and the Joint Revenue Board (Establishment) Act. Together they consolidate and modernise Nigeria’s tax framework.
They are the Nigeria Tax Act (substantive tax rules), the Tax Administration Act (procedural and enforcement rules), the Nigeria Revenue Service (Establishment) Act (institutional powers of the revenue authority) and the Joint Revenue Board (Establishment) Act (federal–state coordination).
PAYE is calculated by applying graduated tax rates to the employee’s taxable income after deducting the consolidated relief allowance and other statutory reliefs as adjusted by the Nigeria Tax Act 2026. Employers should recalibrate payroll systems and run parallel calculations during the transition period.
Businesses face mandatory electronic filing, stricter penalties for late returns, expanded revenue-authority data-access powers, updated WHT and VAT rates, and revised CGT rules. The overall effect is a wider tax net and a stronger compliance enforcement environment.
Update due-diligence checklists to cover TIN validity, outstanding assessments, TP documentation, PAYE reconciliation and CGT exposure. Refresh tax representations, warranties and indemnity clauses in transaction documents to reference the 2026 Acts expressly.
All four Acts commenced on 1 January 2026. Key deadlines include monthly PAYE, VAT and WHT remittances, and the annual CIT return (typically due six months after the financial year-end). Specific filing dates are published by the revenue authority on its official portal.
At a minimum: the General Counsel, Chief Financial Officer, Head of Tax, Payroll Manager, Company Secretary and the Board (via the Audit/Risk Committee). Early notification enables coordinated implementation across legal, finance and HR functions.
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Nigeria 2026 Corporate Tax Compliance Checklist: 10 Practical Steps for Gcs and Cfos

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