In markets across Abuja and its environs, a new trend is emerging as the 2026 tax laws take effect: the “transfer boycott.” Traders at Mararaba and Nyanya, once early adopters of mobile banking, are increasingly demanding cash or forcing customers to use Point of Sale (PoS) operators to avoid “bank alert taxes.”
However, a closer look at the Nigeria Tax Act 2025 reveals a massive gap between the rumors fueling this behavior and the actual legal reality.
1. The Misconception: “Tax on Every Drop”
Traders like Mr. Fidelis Agbo are operating under the belief that the government now collects a tax on every naira that enters an account. This fear has led to:
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The PoS Split: Traders directing customers to withdraw cash, with both parties splitting the transaction charges.
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Manual Overpricing: Buyers, like Mrs. Sarah Onifade, being asked for “extra tax money” (sometimes as much as ₦20,000 to ₦50,000) simply for choosing to pay via transfer.
2. The Reality: The ₦800,000 Shield
Contrary to market rumors, the new tax regime actually provides the most significant relief for low-income earners in Nigeria’s history:
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Personal Income Tax (PIT) Exemption: Anyone earning ₦800,000 or less per year is now 100% exempt from income tax.
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Small Business Relief: Companies with an annual turnover below ₦50 million are now subject to a 0% Company Income Tax (CIT) rate.
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Zero-Rated Essentials: The law explicitly mandates 0% VAT on basic food items, medical products, and educational materials—the very things these traders are selling.
3. Why the Fear? The “Presumptive Tax” Trap
The anxiety is not entirely baseless, but it is misplaced. The real change in the 2026 law is the Presumptive Tax System. If a trader has no records and refuses to use a Tax ID, tax authorities are now empowered to “presume” their income based on lifestyle or shop size. By moving to cash, traders believe they are hiding their tracks, but they are actually forfeiting the Rent Relief (up to ₦500,000) and the 800k Exemption that they would be entitled to if they remained in the formal digital system.
4. The Call for “Market Language” Sensitization
As Mrs. Sarah Akator and other business owners have noted, the current crisis is one of communication. The National Orientation Agency (NOA) has recently launched a campaign to translate these complex laws into 72 local languages.
The goal is to convince traders that a digital record is not a “tax trap” but a “protection certificate” that proves they fall below the taxable threshold.
