The Chairman of the Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria, Abuja District, Ben Enamudu, has dismissed claims that bank balances are taxed under Nigeria’s new tax regime, saying only certain electronic transfers attract a ₦50 stamp duty and that the reforms are designed to shield low-income earners.
Speaking in an interview with ARISE News on Tuesday, Enamudu said misinformation about the reforms—particularly around bank transfers and income thresholds—has caused undue concern among Nigerians.
“The narrative out there, which is the wrong narrative, is that the money in your bank account will be taxed. There is no provision for that in our tax laws. Nobody taxes the money in your bank account,” he said.
He explained that the charge applicable to electronic transfers is a stamp duty, not a tax on deposits or account balances.
“When you make transfers from your account to someone else, there is a ₦50 stamp duty that applies. However, if you maintain multiple accounts within the same bank, you are not expected to pay the stamp duty,” Enamudu said.
According to him, the reform also changes who bears the cost of the duty.
“Before now, both the sender and the receiver bore the burden of the stamp duty. But with the new tax reform, only the sender pays,” he said.


