The Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee has announced a bold, sweeping set of measures scheduled to take effect on January 1, 2026. The initiative aims to ease the tax burden on low-income workers, average taxpayers and small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) by unveiling up to 50 exemptions and reliefs.
At its core, the reforms seek to make Nigeria’s tax framework fairer, simpler and more inclusive. In the words of Committee Chairman Taiwo Oyedele, the plan represents “one of the most people-focused tax reforms in Nigeria’s recent history.”
Key personal income tax changes include full exemption for individuals earning the national minimum wage or below, and a tax-free annual gross income threshold of up to ₦1.2 million (approximately ₦800,000 taxable income) for other earners. Pension contributions, life insurance premiums, owner-occupied housing loan interest and rent relief (up to ₦500,000) are maintained as deductible items. Compensation for job loss up to ₦50 million and pension/gratuity payments under the Pension Reform Act are also tax-exempt.
In the corporate and enterprise sphere, the reforms are generous: companies with turnover below ₦100 million and total fixed assets not exceeding ₦250 million will pay 0% companies income tax, and startups meeting eligibility criteria likewise benefit. Agricultural enterprises (crop production, livestock and dairy) get a five-year tax holiday. Value Added Tax (VAT) relief is widespread: essential food items, rent, education materials, healthcare services, pharmaceuticals, baby products, electric vehicles and parts, and humanitarian supplies will be zero-rated or exempt. SMEs with annual revenue under ₦100 million will not have to charge VAT at all. A further relief is on stamp duty: electronic transfers under ₦10,000, salary payments, intra-bank transfers and transfers involving government securities/shares are exempt.
The committee also emphasises communication and transparency. Oyedele cautioned that: “Misinformation spreads fast, often to the author’s benefit but to the audience’s loss. Accurate information may travel slower, but it empowers everyone and earns lasting trust.” This indicates a concerted effort to improve public understanding of the reforms, as well as their implementation.
From an economic angle, the reforms signal a strategic shift: by exempting lower-income earners and SMEs, the government appears to be unlocking disposable income and business reinvestment, while also simplifying compliance and broadening the tax base. Given Nigeria’s historically low tax-to-GDP ratio (around 10.8 %), this could stimulate consumption, growth and formalisation of the economy.
In practical terms, for individuals and families earning lower incomes, the relief means more take-home pay and lower costs for essential goods/services thanks to VAT exemptions. SMEs will have fewer burdensome taxes and simpler compliance procedures, freeing up capital for hiring, investment or expansion. Over time, the aim is to boost employment, increase productivity and improve economic resilience.
However, while generous, these measures also impose new responsibilities: better tax registration, compliance, and transparency are required under the new laws. Some analysts caution that while tax relief is helpful, SMEs still face structural obstacles, such as access to finance, infrastructure deficits, and digital capacity, that must be addressed for the full benefit of the reforms to materialise.
From January 2026, thousands of individual earners and SMEs across Nigeria stand to benefit from lower tax burdens, simpler rules and greater financial flexibility. The challenge ahead will be in the implementation, ensuring that the promised relief translates into real-world impact, and that the broader tax system remains sustainable and equitable.




