Nigeria to Track Crypto Transactions Using National IDs and Tax Records

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Nigeria is expanding its tax oversight by requiring crypto platforms to collect users’ Tax Identification Numbers (TINs) and National Identification Numbers (NINs) under the Nigerian Tax Administration Act (NTAA) 2025. The law aims to track capital gains tax on crypto profits and aligns with global CFT standards. The move supports the OECD’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) and follows a $92.1 billion surge in Nigeria’s crypto market over the past year.

Nigeria has revealed new tax law mechanisms that could eventually make cryptocurrencies traceable using national IDs.

The Nigerian Tax Administration Act (NTAA) 2025 noted that the government is planning to track crypto transactions in real-time, using Tax Identification Numbers (TINs) and National Identification Numbers (NINs).

Per a report by TechCabal, the method will make it easy for tax authorities to track largely invisible crypto transactions without directly accessing the blockchain itself. By linking it to national IDs, crypto flows can be matched with income declarations and tax records, the report added.

Linking National IDs to Crypto Transfers – Here’s Why

The West African nation has mandated crypto exchanges and service providers to collect and report their clients’ TINs and NINs, expanding its identity tracing system to the crypto ecosystem.

TIN is a unique identification number issued by the Nigerian Revenue Service and the Joint Tax Commission to track tax compliance and enforcement of individuals and businesses. Meanwhile, NIN links personal identification information to biometric data such as fingerprints and face-scanners in the national identity database.

Nigeria has passed a new tax law linking crypto transactions to identities via Tax Identification Numbers (TIN) and National Identity Numbers (NIN), ensuring traceability for tax purposes without compromising blockchain security. VASP are required to collect user details…

— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) January 13, 2026

With the current tax law, authorities can track crypto flows from exchanges to individuals and reported income. This is done without building complex blockchain surveillance infrastructure, it noted.

Nigeria’s financial regulator announced last year that it is considering a bill to include crypto taxation in its regulatory framework.

Besides, Nigeria’s approach aligns with developments under the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF), an OECD initiative for global tax transparency.

Nigeria Leads in Crypto Adoption

Nigeria has become one of Africa’s top cryptocurrency adopters again, per Chainalysis’ 2025 Global Adoption Index. The nation’s crypto market is estimated to have gained $92.1 billion in value between July 2024 and June 2025.

Furthermore, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has recently formed a new task force to explore the adoption of stablecoins. The move comes amid sluggish adoption of the country’s digital currency, the eNaira, and growing public skepticism toward its performance.

The post Nigeria to Track Crypto Transactions Using National Identification Numbers and Tax Records appeared first on Cryptonews.

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