News
Power sector contributes N62.12bn in Company Income Tax to federation account in 2025—NBS
Nigeria’s electricity, gas, steam, and air conditioning supply sector contributed a total of N62.12 billion in Company Income Tax (CIT) in 2025.
This is according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).
The figure represents a decline from the N77.97 billion recorded in 2024, indicating a year-on-year contraction in tax contributions from the energy supply segment.
The latest data highlights weakening performance in the sector despite broader resilience in Nigeria’s corporate tax base.
A quarterly breakdown shows that tax contributions fluctuated significantly throughout the year, reflecting operational and macroeconomic pressures affecting companies in the sector.
The NBS data reveals a mixed performance across quarters, with a noticeable decline in the latter half of the year.
The sector remitted N10.13 billion in Q1 2025, which rose sharply to N24.68 billion in Q2, the highest for the year.
Collections dropped to N15.47 billion in Q3 and further declined to N11.84 billion in Q4.
Overall CIT collections across all sectors fell to N1.49 trillion in Q4 2025 from N2.96 trillion in Q3, representing a 49.81 percent quarter-on-quarter decline.
Despite the quarterly drop, total CIT still recorded a 13.38 percent year-on-year increase compared to Q4 2024.
The data also shows that in Q4 2025, domestic CIT accounted for N819.83 billion, while foreign CIT contributed N668.21 billion, indicating a relatively balanced tax structure.
The performance of the electricity and gas sector comes amid ongoing structural and economic challenges in Nigeria’s energy value chain.
Energy companies continue to grapple with rising costs, infrastructure limitations, and liquidity challenges within the power market.
The sector remains a critical component of Nigeria’s economy, supporting industrial activity and overall growth.
These challenges have continued to affect profitability and tax remittances from operators within the electricity supply industry. The broader tax environment provides additional context to the sector’s performance in 2025.
CIT collections showed strong momentum earlier in the year, rising to N2.96 trillion in Q3 2025 from N2.78 trillion in Q2, reflecting a 6.55 percent increase.
However, this growth was reversed in Q4 with a sharp contraction, suggesting possible seasonal or economic shocks.
The decline in the power sector’s tax contribution aligns with this wider slowdown in corporate tax performance.
This trend suggests that while the overall tax base remains resilient, sector-specific challenges continue to weigh on performance.
-
News24 hours agoRHUCE taps into Africa’s $3bn creator economy with new monetisation platform
-
Stock Market24 hours agoNGX stock index advance 0.44% as investors gained N389.53bn,
-
Finance24 hours agoDFI recapitalisation next on CBN agenda, plans to close N130trn MSME funding gap
-
Oil and Gas24 hours agoBrent crude oil crash under $95/barrel on US ceasefire with Iran
-
Maritime46 minutes agoOnly a handful of ships have passed through Hormuz, further testing fragile truce
-
Economy24 hours agoPension Assets Hit N29.43trn in February, Up by N1.39trn
-
News1 day agoNigeria generated N1.49trn from company income tax in Q4 2025—NBS
-
Economy24 hours agoSub-Saharan Africa faces slower growth as US-Iran war raises costs
