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From FIRS To NRS: Nigeria’s Revenue Authority Begins A New Chapter

In a significant reform of Nigeria’s fiscal architecture, the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), has officially been replaced by the newly established Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), marking a new chapter in our national tax administration system.

The transition took effect as the Nigeria Revenue Service Establishment Act 2025 — signed into law by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in June 2025 — came into force alongside a broader suite of tax reforms starting January 1, 2026.

A New Identity for Revenue Mobilisation

At a high-profile ceremony in Abuja, the NRS unveiled its official logo and brand identity, signifying not just a change in name but a strategic repositioning of Nigeria’s revenue authority.

The rebranding — which replaces the decades-old FIRS moniker familiar to taxpayers and businesses — was led by NRS Executive Chairman, Zacch Adedeji, who described the new identity as a milestone in modernising the nation’s revenue framework.

According to Adedeji, the new logo represents a “renewed commitment to a more unified, efficient and service-oriented revenue system”, aligned with Nigeria’s economic transformation goals and international best practices.

It is intended to signal continuity of purpose, strengthened institutional capacity and a forward-looking approach to supporting taxpayers and national development.

From Reform to Implementation

The establishment of the NRS comes amid a sweeping overhaul of Nigeria’s tax laws — the most comprehensive in decades — aimed at simplifying tax compliance, broadening the tax base, and boosting revenue mobilisation critical for funding infrastructure and public services.

While the reforms have drawn public conversation, including legal challenges aimed at delaying implementation, courts have affirmed that the new tax laws would proceed as scheduled.

Building Trust and Engagement

In unveiling the logo and corporate identity, NRS leadership stressed that tax administration should be synonymous with transparency, partnership and excellent service.

The rebranding was framed as the beginning of a strengthened relationship between the revenue authority and Nigerians — one built on trust, clarity and shared prosperity.

The Nigeria Revenue Service is now tasked with assessing, collecting and accounting for revenue accruable to the federation, with expanded powers and responsibilities under the new legal framework that replaced the erstwhile FIRS.

What This Means for Nigerians

For taxpayers, businesses and citizens, the transformation to NRS promises:

As the new tax regime takes root in 2026, the NRS’s logo and identity will become the symbol of Nigeria’s renewed approach to revenue mobilisation — one shaped by legal reform, institutional strengthening, and a commitment to meet the demands of a dynamic economy.

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