Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms, Taiwo Oyedele, has stated that pastors, imams, and other religious workers must pay tax on the salaries they earn from the religious institutions.
He clarified that while churches, mosques, and other religious bodies are exempt from taxation, the exemption does not extend to individuals employed by those organisations.
Speaking on the podcast ‘Mic On’, he said: “So what the law says is that the church and the mosque will not pay tax unless they start doing business as an institution or organisation. But anybody they pay, whether it’s the pastor, whether it’s the choir… because these people are just working, it just happens that they are working in God’s vineyard.”
Oyedele emphasised that religious workers should not be treated differently from other professionals who earn income.
“They are not different from the other person. The person who is selling food, you don’t think they’re doing the work of God? The farmer who goes to the farm so we can eat is doing the work of God,” he added.
According to him, the Nigerian constitution mandates every citizen to declare their income honestly and pay taxes accordingly.
He, however, pointed out that the government’s new tax reforms will adjust obligations based on income levels.
According to him, low-income earners will be exempt from paying tax starting next year; middle-class earners will see a reduction in their tax rates; and high-income earners will face higher tax obligations.
He stressed that religious leaders fall under the same rules as other citizens.
Oyedele added: “So the way everybody pays, because the only difference is if that amount you are getting is below the threshold for taxation, you are exempted, whether you’re an imam or pastor or you don’t believe in God. The moment you exceed that point as an individual, you will pay tax. We can’t start creating a society where we say some religions are superior to others.”






