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Financial Q&A: Your Questions Answered

Search our comprehensive knowledge base or submit your own question. We provide clear, practical answers to real financial questions from Nigerian entrepreneurs.

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Bookkeeping & Accounting2/4/2026

What supporting documents must I keep?

In 2026, the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) has shifted toward "Data-Driven Audits." This means they use AI to cross-check your bank inflows against your tax filings. To protect yourself, you must keep "Primary Source Documents" that prove every single entry in your books. Under the Nigeria Tax Administration Act 2025, you must retain these for at least 6 years.

Bookkeeping & Accounting2/4/2026

What basic accounting reports should I prepare?

In 2026, the Nigeria Tax Administration Act (NTAA) 2025 and CAMA 2020 mandate a specific set of reports that move beyond simple internal tracking. To be compliant with the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) and the CAC, you should prepare these four primary reports:

Bookkeeping & Accounting2/4/2026

Can I do my own bookkeeping or must I hire an accountant?

In 2026, the answer depends on your business type and revenue. While you can legally do your own day-to-day bookkeeping, Nigerian law makes a professional accountant mandatory for certain end-of-year filings and high-turnover businesses.

Bookkeeping & Accounting2/4/2026

Is bookkeeping mandatory for small businesses?

In 2026, bookkeeping is mandatory for all small businesses in Nigeria. While many small business owners previously operated informally, the Nigeria Tax Act 2025 and the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) reforms have made record-keeping a legal prerequisite for accessing tax benefits. Here is why you cannot ignore bookkeeping in 2026:

Bookkeeping & Accounting2/4/2026

What bookkeeping records must Nigerian businesses maintain?

In 2026, bookkeeping is no longer just about "keeping receipts in a box." Under the Nigeria Tax Act 2025, the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) and CAC now mandate digital-first record-keeping. Failure to maintain these records can lead to the loss of tax exemptions (like the 0% CIT for small businesses) and heavy "Best of Judgment" (BOJ) tax assessments.

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