12 Tax Terms From Nigeria Tax Reforms, Explained In Simple Terms
Nigeria’s new tax reforms and its laws are no longer news to the average Nigerian but the tax landscape has quietly undergone one of its most structural overhauls in years.
While most Nigerians know about the tax laws, just a handful truly understand tax terms and have a proper understanding of the reforms in detail.
Because beneath the surface of policy announcements and reform headlines, new vocabulary are emerging, one that signals how the state intends to modernize revenue collection, tighten compliance, and widen its fiscal net without necessarily increasing headline tax rates.
For businesses, investors, and even informal operators, understanding these terms is no longer optional; it is foundational in understanding how you fully file tax returns.
Below are 12 new tax terms emerging from Nigeria’s tax reforms, explained in simple, practical terms.
1. Development Levy
This levy is a unified 4% charge on assessable profits that replaces multiple levies such as education, tech, and police trust funds. It simplifies corporate obligations by merging separate taxes into a single stream.
Section 59 of the Nigeria Tax Act, states that the levy applies to all companies chargeable to tax under the income tax and petroleum operations chapters, except small companies and non resident companies.
2. VAT Fiscalisation
A digital compliance system that requires businesses to use e-invoicing tools linked directly to the tax authority, ensuring real-time VAT reporting by tax authorities and reducing revenue leakages.
3. Input VAT Recovery
This is a new rule that allows businesses to fully reclaim VAT paid on goods, services, and capital assets, allowing smoother tax offsetting against output VAT collected from customers.
The rule also allows that excess input VAT be carried forward we credit or even refunded where applicable.
4. Minimum Effective Tax Rate (ETR)
A rule that ensures that large companies pay at least a minimum amount of tax. This rule mainly targets multinationals and domestic companies with annual turnover of at least N50 billion.
Large companies, especially multinationals, must maintain at least a 15% effective tax rate. If they fall below it, they are required to pay a top-up tax to bridge the gap.
5. Economic Development Incentive (EDI)
This replaces traditional tax holidays with a performance-based system where companies earn 5% tax credits based on actual capital investment, encouraging measurable economic contribution.
6. Office of the Tax Ombud
This is an independent body created to handle taxpayer complaints, review disputes, and ensure accountability in dealings between citizens, businesses, and tax authorities.
In any case where a taxpayer feels that they are being unfairly treated by a tax authority, they can approach the office of the Tax Ombudsman for intervention
7. Force of Attraction (FoA)
A rule that allows Nigeria to tax foreign companies on transactions tied to their Nigerian operations, even if those transactions occur outside the country.
8. Controlled Foreign Company (CFC) Rules
This targets profit shifting by taxing undistributed earnings held in offshore subsidiaries controlled by Nigerian residents, discouraging the use of tax havens.
9. Advance Rulings
This is a pre-transaction advisory system where businesses can request binding clarification from tax authorities on how specific transactions will be taxed before execution.
For example, a company planning a merger or seeking to change its financial structure can seek clarification from tax authorities to avoid disputes or mishap.
10. Loss of Employment Exemption
This is a tax relief covering certain compensation that is usually paid to workers who lose their jobs
This compensation includes severance packages, redundancy payments, and termination benefits exempt from Capital Gains Tax up to ₦50 million, offering relief to displaced workers.
11. Presumptive Tax
A simplified tax system for informal businesses that estimates tax liabilities using indicators rather than full financial records, bringing micro-operators into the tax net.
This mainly applies to small traders, entrepreneurs and informal businesses that do not maintain a proper book of accounts.
12. Significant Economic Presence (SEP)
This extends taxation to digital and remote businesses that earn income from Nigeria, even without physical offices, capturing e-commerce, streaming, and online services.
A non-resident company may also be considered taxable if they earn substantial income from Nigerian users through e-commerce platforms, apps or even streaming services.
Taken together, these reforms reveal a deliberate shift: Nigeria has moved from a fragmented, analogue tax system to a more centralized, digitized, and globally aligned framework.
The emphasis is clear, broaden the tax base, close loopholes, and formalize both digital and informal economic activity while reducing administrative inefficiencies for compliant businesses.
However, the real test will not be in how well these terms are defined on paper, but in how consistently and transparently they are implemented.
For businesses, this new taxonomy of taxation signals a period of adjustment where compliance, digital readiness, and financial planning will matter more than ever.
Nigeria is not just rewriting its tax rules, it is rewriting the language of taxation itself.
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