FIRS lists gain of new tax reforms

FIRS lists gain of new tax reforms

The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), yesterday highlighted the benefits of the new tax law put in place by the Federal Government listing the inherent gain to include strengthening of tax compliance and a boost to the revenue generation of the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration.

Besides, the FIRS said the new tax regime will factor in developments in the aviation sector to ensure that air travel is not severely impacted.

Assistant Director, FIRS, Mrs. Nkechi Umegakwe, who was the lead speaker at the Webinar organized by Aviation and Allied Company Limited disclosed this while shedding light on the effects of the new tax law on operations in the air transport ecosystem.

According to the FIRS Assistant Director, Nigeria’s new tax law, enacted through the Finance Act 2023 and signed into law in June 2025, is expected to consider the fragility of the aviation sector, where operators are grappling with a myriad of challenges including the rising cost of operations.

She stated that the Federal Government had implemented a comprehensive tax reform initiative aimed at enhancing ease of doing business, boosting revenue generation, strengthening tax compliance and aligning the Nigerian tax system with global best practices across key sectors.These tax reforms, according to her, introduce significant changes to existing tax law with certain implications for the aviation sector- a critical contributor to Nigeria’s economic growth and employment.

The former Managing Director of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Dr. Richard Aisuebeogun,  who moderated the webinar said that when the tax base is broadened, it would help the government with money to run the economy.

But, operators in the sector who participated in the webinar , however, picked holes in the new tax law , saying the anticipated  tax changes planned for implementation in January 2026 run  contrary to the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO)  standards and may lead to fare increases, reduced passenger loads, job losses, and a general decline in the industry, according to operators and experts

The new tax law , the experts said, may lead to an increase in the cost of tickets, as airlines are already gearing towards that.

The implication, they say, may occasion many  people shunning  air travel as the number of people who take to air travel is already reducing.

The experts  called on President Bola Tinubu to cause a review of the tax reform, noting that its implementation restores the resumption of Value Added Tax (VAT) on commercial aircraft, commercial aircraft engines, commercial engine spare parts, airline transportation tickets issued and sold by commercial airlines registered in Nigeria, as double taxation.

The founder and Managing Director of Landover Company Limited, Capt Edward Boyo, while appealing to the President to take a further look at the tax reform which he admitted has so many benefits but at disadvantage to the growth of the aviation industry in Nigeria urged him and the Director-General of the  Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Dr. Zacch Adedeji to reconsider putting the sector on the priority sector list.

Boyo noted that with the present situation, it does not look like the government was ready to free the sector from the shackles of multiple taxation and levies, the two twin factors that have seriously plummeted the fortunes of the sector.

He said, “The country’s economy cannot grow without the aviation industry. Jobs cannot be created if nothing is done to improve the fortune of the industry. We call on the government to review the numerous charges and levies that affect airlines in the country. If not, we may see an increase in air fares because high costs of operation could lead to raising ticket prices”.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) Area Manager for West and Central Africa,  Dr. Samson Fatokun, lamented the different levies imposed on airlines and several other companies in the sector, stressing that the new tax law would do incalculable damage to the entire aviation value chain.

Fatokun further stated that the aviation industry in Nigeria is an offshoot of international aviation bodies like the ICAO, a body of the United Nations, to which Nigeria is a signatory, and has been insulated from charges within.

 “Nigeria is a signatory to ICAO, which is part of the UN, and cannot be bound by another treaty. In domestic aviation, we have VAT and other levies. We recall in 2004, when our President was chairman of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), there was a document signed by the President saying there wouldn’t be imposition of additional costs on air transportation”.

Brandishing a copy of the document, Fatokun said the document is available to any airline and experts in the sector, so there won’t be a need to contradict what has been signed.

 “Those moveable assets cannot be taxed or apply tax law to that. The Nigerian tax authority needs to be in the know about the law governing aviation”, he added.

An economist and a former Rector of the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), Zaria, Capt. Samuel Caulcrick stated that the major funding of aviation agencies comes from 5% deductions from ticket sales and cargo charges, known as Ticket Sales Charges (TSC) and Cargo Sales Charges (CSC)..

These charges that are paid for by passengers and remitted to the aviation regulatory body through the airlines are choking, adding, “It has reduced passenger numbers and freight movement. This new reform amounts to double taxation. The Federal Government should exempt aviation from this new tax reform”.

The Managing Director of Pathfinders International Limited, Mrs. Nkechi Onyenso, said there is a need for further engagement between airline operators and the FIRS because of the loopholes in the tax reform.

She said adding tax burden to the already stretched airlines and companies in the aviation sector would not only deplete traffic but seriously affect carriers by adding increased costs of operation, even though she admitted the desirability of the tax reforms.

FIRS lists gain of new tax reforms - The Nation Newspaper