This paper critically examines the 2025 Nigerian Tax Reform Acts, comprising the Nigeria Tax Act (NTA), Nigeria Tax Administration Act (NTAA), Nigeria Revenue Service Establishment Act (NRSEA), and the Joint Revenue Board Establishment Act (JRBEA). These Acts represent the most comprehensive overhaul of Nigeria’s tax system in decades, aiming to modernize, consolidate, and digitalize tax administration while enhancing intergovernmental coordination and fiscal transparency. The study employed a review and analysis of research papers, recent legal texts, government policy briefs, and professional insights. The paper evaluates the structural and procedural reforms introduced by each Act, including the replacement of outdated tax statutes, the introduction of progressive income tax and zero-rated VAT provisions, the establishment of the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), and the creation of a centralized Joint Revenue Board to harmonize federal, state, and local tax administration. It also explores the anticipated challenges associated with implementation, such as infrastructure deficits, institutional resistance, digital exclusion, constitutional tensions, and data privacy concerns. Despite these hurdles, the paper argues that the Acts collectively offers strong prospects for enhancing revenue generation, improving taxpayer equity, supporting business formalization, and fostering a more accountable fiscal system. The conclusion emphasizes that the long-term success of these reforms will depend on political will, capacity building, stakeholder engagement, and effective enforcement mechanisms.
Oriaifoh et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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