The Federal Inland Revenue Service has achieved a record-breaking tax collection of N47.39tn between October 2023 and September 2025.
The review period is under the current leadership of the FIRS Chairman, Zacch Adedeji, who was appointed on September 14, 2023.
According to the latest tax performance figures released by the FIRS, it exceeded its revenue target by 15 per cent.
The data shows that the service recorded sustained growth in both oil and non-oil revenue sources, reflecting the impact of ongoing tax reforms and modernisation initiatives.
The N47.39 trillion collection represents a significant increase from N21.97 trillion recorded between October 2021 and September 2023, showing a 115 per cent performance against target.
Non-import VAT exceeded its target by 137 per cent, while import VAT hit 131 per cent, within the review period, indicating higher compliance among registered businesses through enhanced digital monitoring and stricter enforcement of tax remittances across key sectors.
“In the last two years (October 2023 to Sept 2025), FIRS achieved significant revenue improvements in mobilisation. It achieved a record-breaking revenue growth of N47.39tn, representing 115 per cent of the target. Non-oil revenue accounted for 76 per cent of total collections, reflecting diversification and reform success,” the report stated.
From January to September 2025 alone, the FIRS collected N22.59 trillion, equivalent to 120 per cent of its revenue target and about 90 per cent of the annual target of N25.2 trillion. From this amount, oil tax receipts amounted to N5.29 trillion, reflecting 98 per cent of the target for the period.
In contrast, non-oil taxes surged to N17.3 trillion, surpassing projections by 128 per cent and accounting for 76 per cent of total revenue collected within the review period.
Between January and September 2025, the Service recorded a total collection of N22.59 trillion, representing 120 per cent of the target for the period and about 90 per cent of the annual target.
“Of this amount, oil tax revenue stood at N5.29tn, achieving 98 per cent of the target, while non-oil taxes contributed N17.3tn, representing 128 per cent of the target and accounting for 76 per cent of the total collection,” it added.
The agency attributed the revenue performance to increase in Company Income Tax (non-oil), which contributed 32.6 per cent of total receipts, followed by non-import VAT (23.2 per cent) and Petroleum Profit Tax/Hydrocarbon Tax (17.4 per cent). Other key contributors included Company Income Tax (upstream activities) at 7.1 per cent, import VAT (7.03 per cent), education tax (6.1 per cent), and gas income (2.3 per cent).
Levies such as electronic money transfer, capital gains, and stamp duties made up smaller proportions.
The FIRS also said the revenue surge was as a result of its sustained reform drive under the leadership of its current management team, including the deployment of digital platforms such as the National Single Window, the National E-Invoicing System, and improved stakeholder integration as well as the enactment of new tax reform laws in 2025, which simplified compliance procedures, closed administrative loopholes, and aligned Nigeria’s tax regime with global best practices.
It expressed hope of meting its internal target of N25.2 trillion by December 2025, an amount that is 37.6 per cent higher than the figure captured in the national budget.






