Stakeholders Raise Concerns About Crypto Tax, Fears It May Push Nigerian traders to P2P.

December 3, 2025

Digital asset operators have started entertaining fears that plans to tax cryptocurrency transactions under the Nigeria Tax Administration Act (NTAA), will accelerate a shift toward peer-to-peer (P2P) trading

The operators argue that the combination of new tax obligations, strict reporting requirements, and lingering regulatory uncertainty may drive users away from licensed exchanges, undermining the government’s objective of formalising and monitoring the sector.

The Nigeria Tax Administration Act, NTAA, scheduled to be effective from January 2026, introduces significant compliance demands on Virtual Assets Service Providers (VASPs), including mandatory registration with the tax authority, detailed KYC data retention for seven years, and compulsory reporting of large or suspicious transactions to both the tax authorities and the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU).

Non-compliance will attracts a N10 million penalty in the first month and N1 million for each subsequent month, alongside potential licence suspension or revocation by the Securities and Exchange Commission,, SEC.

“Taxable virtual assets transactions shall include, the sale! exchange, or transfer of virtual assets; mining or staking activities that generate income; airdrops, bounties, or any form of virtual asset received as compensation or reward; and any other transaction or activity relating to virtual assets.

READ MORE; Crypto Market Cap Dragged Down To $3.45T By Bitcoin, Ethereum Selloffs.

“Transactions where payment for goods and services is made with virtual assets shall be subject to the same tax treatment as transactions conducted in fiat currency,” the Act states.
Rising costs and compliance burdens
Stakeholders in the blockchain industry caution that the new tax obligations will push retail traders, who constitute a significant portion of Nigeria’s crypto user base, toward P2P platforms where transactions are harder to track and enforce.

Speaking with journalists, Convener of Lagos Blockchain Week, Chukwuemeka Mbaebie, notes that the layers of compliance embedded in the NTAA will discourage many small-scale traders who currently rely on centralised exchanges.

Mbaebie, explained that the mandatory KYC processes, NIN/Tax Identification Number linkages, and quarterly transaction reporting are likely to make formal trading less attractive.

He said these burdens “could deter retail traders” and lead to a resurgence of unlicensed P2P activity, as users seek to avoid direct oversight and tax implications.

He predicts a surge in P2P transactions and warns that this could create new challenges for regulators, particularly around capital flight and untraceable flows.

Sharing similar concern, the President of the Stakeholders in Blockchain Technology Association of Nigeria (SiBAN), Obinna Iwuno, raised concern on risk of deepening the underground market, warning that the tax framework could unintentionally empower P2P markets.

Iwuno, argues that traders may reduce activity on licensed exchanges and instead migrate to informal networks where enforcement is weak.

He pointed to existing user behaviour as an example, noting that the introduction of a 7.5% VAT on certain exchanges already prompted many traders to abandon platforms like KuCoin.

In his view, an additional tax regime arriving before Nigeria has issued comprehensive crypto licences will intensify this shift.

Iwuno said, “The tax regime will chase a lot of traders to P2P, which is not a market we should encourage to thrive. And it is in the hands of the regulators to actually make sure that it does not thrive.

“It is not by chasing people around. If you license more people, those people whom you license will make sure that nobody is operating underground, because it will be detrimental to their own business.

READ MORE; Bitcoin, Ethereum Drop As Investors Sentiment In Crypto Slows

“They can’t spend money on incorporation, application, licensing, and then somebody is on WhatsApp or offline somewhere doing businesses while they have running costs and are not doing business. They will be the ones to check the market. They will be the ones to whistleblow,”

Another concern reised among stakeholders is that the tax is being introduced before Nigeria has provided full licensing clarity to the sector.

Iwuno notes that only two crypto exchanges, Quidax and Busha, currently hold Approval in Principle licences, with no fully operational licences issued. He argues that without a broad base of licensed operators, the tax regime will struggle to gain traction.

He further suggests that expanding licences, accelerating the SEC’s Accelerated Regulatory Incubation Programme and introducing a tiered licensing system could strengthen the formal market.

With more licensed exchanges, he said, self-regulation would naturally emerge as compliant operators work to protect their investments by reporting unlicensed competitors.

According to Iwuno, there is the need to grow the crypto industry  and what the crypto industry needs is support from the government to grow, adding that the government would gain more when the industry becomes well-developed.

“We should be looking at tax holidays or favourable tax regime. This is a new industry, the government should be looking at ways to expand it so that it will be the biggest gainer in the long run,” he said.

The SiBAN President lamented  that despite being the second in crypto adoption globally, Nigeria still lacks proper regulation, adding that regulation should have come before any discussion about tax.

The security and exchange commission, SEC, in August 2024, in its first crypto regulation move, granted an Approval-in-Principle to two crypto exchanges, Quidax and Busha, giving them the status of legally recognised crypto trading platforms in the country.

The two exchanges were approved under the Accelerated Regulatory Incubation Program (ARIP) of the Commission.

At the time, the SEC had noted that the approved firms were not the only entities that had applied to ARIP and the RI Program.
It added that other applications received were being assessed and would be granted Approval-in-Principle on a case-by-case basis as they meet all its requirements.
However, over one year later, the SEC has yet to grant approval to another exchange despite the queue of several exchanges that have applied to the regulator.
This has continued to generate concerns among stakeholders, even as the excitement created last year about the prospects of the licensing has now waned.

However, at a meeting with fintech stakeholders earlier this year, the Director General of SEC, Emomotimi Agama,  explained  that the issuance of crypto licences was being delayed  because a lot of issues came up from the first set of licences that require a higher level of due diligence before other licenses are approved.

Idris Buba
Idris Buba
Correspondent

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