Hi IKing Ferry,
Please I need more clarification about how tax works for holding companies and group structures in Nigeria.
For example, if somebody owns a holding company with multiple subsidiaries under it, does FIRS now NRS calculate the tax collectively as one group, or does each subsidiary pay tax separately on its own profit?
I’m asking because I’ve been trying to understand how most big companies in Nigeria structure their businesses.
For instance, if a parent company owns:
– a media company
– a logistics company
– a real estate company
Will the government calculate tax for the whole group together, or will each subsidiary prepare its own financial statement and pay separate tax individually?
And another thing I’m also confused about is this:
Why do many rich people and large corporations prefer using holding company structures instead of operating everything under one company?
Is it mainly for tax purposes, asset protection, risk management, or are there other hidden advantages involved?
I would really appreciate if you can break this down in a simple way for beginners to understand because many of us hear words like:
– holding company
– subsidiaries
– group structure
– consolidated accounts
– transfer pricing
But we don’t fully understand how they work practically in Nigeria.
Please explain this using simple relatable examples.
Very good question. And to be very honest with you, this is one of the reasons why many people don’t understand how powerful holding companies and group structures work in business. Now let me break this down in the simplest way possible so that even Mama Ngozi that sells tomatoes in the village wilRead more
Very good question.
And to be very honest with you, this is one of the reasons why many people don’t understand how powerful holding companies and group structures work in business.
Now let me break this down in the simplest way possible so that even Mama Ngozi that sells tomatoes in the village will understand.
In Nigeria, tax is usually calculated based on EACH company separately…
not the group collectively.
Meaning…
Even if you have:
– 10 subsidiaries
– under 1 holding company
The FIRS now NRS will still treat each subsidiary as an independent legal entity for tax purposes.
Now let me explain with a simple example.
Imagine you own:
– Fokona Media Ltd
– Fokona Properties Ltd
– Fokona Logistics Ltd
Then all of them are owned by:
Fokona Holdings Ltd.
Now…
Even though all these companies belong to one group…
FIRS will still ask each company to:
– file its own tax
– prepare its own financial statement
– declare its own profit
– pay its own Company Income Tax (CIT)
– pay its own VAT obligations
Why?
Because legally…
each subsidiary is treated as a separate company.
Now here is where many people get confused.
A HOLDING COMPANY is not the same thing as one business account.
No.
A holding company is more like a parent.
While the subsidiaries are separate children.
Each child can:
– make profit
– make loss
– owe debt
– own assets
– pay tax independently
Now let me even shock you.
This structure is one of the smartest structures big businesses use globally.
Why?
Because it helps:
– risk management
– asset protection
– tax planning
– easier investment raising
– operational control
For Example…
Let’s assume:
Your logistics company enters serious debt.
If structured properly…
that debt may not automatically destroy your media company or property company.
Why?
Because they are separate legal entities.
That is one major advantage of group structure.
Now as your Financial Literacy Advocate…
Let me tell you another thing many people don’t know…
Even though subsidiaries are taxed separately…
there are still situations where group financial statements are prepared collectively.
This is what we called: “Consolidated Financial Statements.” in Accounting.
Meaning:
The group can prepare one combined report to show:
– total assets
– total liabilities
– total revenue
– total performance of the entire group
But that DOES NOT automatically mean tax is paid collectively.
That is the difference many people don’t understand.
Now as an Accountant and investment Strategist let me also add this…
If transactions are happening between subsidiaries…
The FIRS can still monitor those transactions carefully.
Why?
Because some companies try to shift profit around subsidiaries to reduce tax exposure.
That is why there are rules around:
– transfer pricing
– related party transactions
– intercompany transactions
Especially for large corporations.
Now let me even say something honestly…
Understanding structure is one thing that separates small business owners from real business empires.
Because…
Most small businesses in Nigeria only think about:
“Make money today.”
But wealthy people think about:
– structure
– governance
– sustainability
– taxation
– succession
– asset protection
That is why financial literacy is very important.
Because business is not only about making money.
It is about understanding HOW money, law, structure, and systems work together.
My Name is Iking Ferry,
See lessA Financial Literacy Advocate and Investment Strategist on a mission to build 10 million financially free Nigerians and Africans through Fokona with the right knowledge.
In Nigeria, the general rule is this: � Each company inside a group is usually treated as a separate legal and tax entity by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), even if one parent company owns all of them. So a holding company structure does not automatically mean one combined tax bill for thRead more
In Nigeria, the general rule is this:
See less�
Each company inside a group is usually treated as a separate legal and tax entity by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), even if one parent company owns all of them.
So a holding company structure does not automatically mean one combined tax bill for the whole group.
Let’s break it down simply.
1. What Is a Holding Company?
A holding company is simply a company created mainly to own shares in other companies.
Example:
Jeremiah Group Structure
Parent/Holding Company
Jeremiah Holdings Ltd
Subsidiaries
Jeremiah Media Ltd
Jeremiah Logistics Ltd
Jeremiah Properties Ltd
The holding company controls the subsidiaries because it owns most (or all) of their shares.
But legally:
Jeremiah Media Ltd = separate company
Jeremiah Logistics Ltd = separate company
Jeremiah Properties Ltd = separate company
Each has:
its own CAC registration
bank account
financial statements
tax obligations
liabilities
2. How Does FIRS Tax Them?
Usually, each subsidiary pays tax separately.
So:
Company
Profit
Tax Paid Individually?
Media company
₦500m
Yes
Logistics company
₦200m
Yes
Real estate company
₦50m
Yes
FIRS does NOT normally say:
“Add everything together and pay one group tax.”
Instead:
each company files Company Income Tax (CIT)
each company files VAT
each company files withholding tax schedules
each company may undergo separate tax audit
3. Then Why Do We Hear About “Consolidated Accounts”?
This confuses many people.
A group may prepare:
separate accounts for each subsidiary AND ALSO
consolidated group accounts
The consolidated account is mainly for:
investors
shareholders
banks
regulators
stock exchange reporting
It shows the “big picture” of the whole group combined.
Example:
Company
Profit
Media
₦500m
Logistics
₦200m
Real Estate
₦50m
Consolidated group profit:
₦750m
But tax is still usually calculated company-by-company.
So:
Consolidated reporting does NOT automatically mean consolidated taxation.
That is the key point many people miss.
4. Why Do Rich People Use Holding Company Structures?
This is where strategy comes in.
It is not only about tax.
The biggest reasons are:
A. Risk Protection (Very Important)
Imagine everything is inside ONE company:
media business
trucks
properties
factories
Now assume the logistics arm causes a major accident and gets sued for ₦20 billion.
If everything is under one company:
the court can target ALL assets
Including:
media assets
buildings
land
cash
But with subsidiaries:
Logistics Ltd gets sued
Media Ltd may remain protected
Real Estate Ltd may remain protected
This is one of the biggest reasons groups separate businesses.
B. Easier Investment & Partnerships
Suppose an investor wants to invest only in the logistics business.
With subsidiaries:
they can buy shares in Jeremiah Logistics Ltd only
Without disturbing:
media company
property company
Very flexible.
C. Easier Sale of Businesses
If the owner wants to sell the media business:
they can sell only the media subsidiary
instead of restructuring the whole empire.
D. Tax Efficiency (But Not “No Tax”)
Many people think holding companies magically avoid tax.
Not exactly.
But group structures can create:
tax planning opportunities
dividend efficiency
capital allocation flexibility
For example:
If a subsidiary pays dividend to the holding company, certain exemptions may apply under Nigerian tax rules to avoid double taxation in some situations.
Groups also strategically use:
management fees
intercompany loans
capital structure planning
But FIRS watches this closely.
That is where transfer pricing comes in.
5. What Is Transfer Pricing?
Transfer pricing simply means:
How related companies inside the same group charge each other.
Example:
Jeremiah Logistics transports goods for Jeremiah Media
Logistics company charges Media company ₦500m
FIRS may ask:
“Is ₦500m a real market price or are you manipulating profits?”
Because groups can abuse internal pricing to:
reduce taxable profit
shift profit to low-tax entities
avoid tax
So Nigeria has:
Transfer Pricing Regulations
documentation requirements
related-party disclosure rules
Large groups must be careful.
6. Can One Subsidiary’s Loss Reduce Another’s Tax?
This is another important point.
In many countries, some form of “group relief” exists.
Nigeria is more restrictive.
Generally:
Company A’s loss stays with Company A
Company B cannot freely use it
Example:
Company
Result
Media Ltd
₦500m profit
Logistics Ltd
₦300m loss
FIRS usually taxes:
Media Ltd on ₦500m profit
The group cannot automatically say:
“Net everything to ₦200m.”
That is one reason corporate structuring matters a lot.
7. Why Not Just Operate Everything Under One Company?
Because as businesses grow:
risk grows
investors increase
regulation increases
financing becomes more complex
One-company structure becomes messy.
Large groups prefer separation because it gives:
legal protection
operational clarity
financing flexibility
succession planning
easier expansion
easier audits
better governance
8. Real-Life Nigerian Examples
Many Nigerian conglomerates use this structure.
Examples include groups around:
banking
cement
telecoms
consumer goods
energy
insurance
A parent company may own:
manufacturing subsidiary
finance subsidiary
real estate subsidiary
export subsidiary
Each still files separate taxes.
9. Simple Market-Woman Example
Imagine Mama Ngozi sells:
tomatoes
rice
transport services
If everything is one business:
one problem can destroy everything.
But instead she creates:
Company
Business
Ngozi Foods Ltd
Rice
Ngozi Farms Ltd
Tomatoes
Ngozi Transport Ltd
Delivery
Now:
each keeps separate books
each pays separate tax
risk is separated
Then she creates:
Ngozi Holdings Ltd
which owns all three.
That is basically how many large business groups work.
10. Final Summary
In Nigeria:
Tax
Each subsidiary is usually taxed separately by Federal Inland Revenue Service
Accounts
Groups may prepare consolidated financial statements
Holding company advantages
risk protection
easier investment
easier sale of businesses
governance structure
tax planning opportunities
succession planning
asset protection
Transfer pricing
FIRS monitors transactions between related companies to prevent tax abuse
Important concept
A “group” may look like one empire publicly, but legally and tax-wise:
the subsidiaries are often treated as separate persons.