By Ussiju Medaner
Soon and very certainly, a day will come when an average Nigerian will walk into a banking hall or attempt a simple mobile transfer and face a life-altering surprise. The system will respond bluntly, “You can’t operate this account again if you don’t have your Tax Identification Number.”
The shock will be unbearable for many, not just because their money is being withheld. Still, because they never thought their small trade, daily hustle, or simple civil service salary had anything to do with a tax number they may have never heard of. Yet, this is the reality Nigeria is walking toward. By January 1, 2026, millions risk being locked out of their own funds if they fail to obtain a Tax Identification Number (TIN). The rule is straightforward: no TIN, no bank account; no TIN, no transfer; no TIN, no business. It is not a rumor. It is law.
The logic from government’s perspective is understandable. For decades, our financial system has operated in shadows, with too much money moving untracked and too many businesses making fortunes without filing returns. Nigeria’s tax base is narrow, and reliance on oil revenues has proven unsustainable. The TIN requirement is an attempt to widen the net, close loopholes, and tie every financial activity to a traceable identity. On paper, it is neat, a way to ensure accountability, improve revenue, and align our system with global standards. In practice, however, it could upend millions of financial lives overnight unless massive sensitization and easy solutions are put in place.
The danger is not that Nigerians are unwilling to comply; it is that most Nigerians do not even know this policy exists or how it affects them. Go into markets in Aba, motor parks in Kaduna, campuses in Nsukka, or neighborhoods in Ibadan, and you will find blank stares at the mere mention of TIN. The okada rider, the tomato seller, the mechanic, and even the young graduate freelancer all risk discovering its importance only when their accounts are frozen. And by then, it would be too late. Nigeria has lived through similar experiences before. The Bank Verification Number rollout taught us that many ignored warnings until the very last week, when banks overflowed with desperate crowds. The NIN-SIM linkage followed the same chaotic pattern with endless queues wrapping around telecom offices. Yet, the TIN rollout is even more consequential, because this time, the issue is not just identity but direct access to money. Nobody can gamble with their cash.
It is for this reason that awareness must become the beating heart of the policy. This is not the time for government to rest behind desks or rely only on English mainstream media that reaches only a fraction of the population. This is the time for sensitization that meets Nigerians in their own languages, through their own trusted channels, and in the places they live and trade. Imagine FIRS teams setting up desks at Ariaria Market in Aba or Wuse Market in Abuja, registering traders instantly while explaining in Pidgin and Hausa how a TIN protects their future. Imagine church announcements after Sunday service inviting worshippers to register right at the church gate, and imams reminding Muslims at Friday prayers that securing their financial access is a responsibility they owe to themselves and their families. Picture rural communities listening to catchy jingles on radio in Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, Tiv, Kanuri, Efik, and Pidgin, where the message is simple: “Without TIN, your money no go move.” These are the forms of grassroots communication Nigeria needs now, not glossy adverts on television alone.
Even more powerful would be the use of storytelling and entertainment. Community theatre in village squares could dramatize the struggle of a farmer who cannot sell his yams because his account is blocked. Nollywood could create skits where a groom is embarrassed because he cannot pay for his wedding expenses as his card keeps declining. Comedians could weave jokes about mechanics or students stranded by the lack of TIN. These creative forms communicate more effectively than long official speeches. They appeal to people’s emotions, fears, and sense of humor, ensuring that the message sticks.
But awareness is only half the work. Solutions that ease registration and remove bottlenecks must walk hand in hand with sensitization. Nigerians are weary of abrupt, poorly planned rollouts. If the TIN policy is to succeed without hardship, the process must be simple, fast, and close to the people. Mobile registration vans, similar to INEC’s voter registration vehicles, could move from town to town, bringing the service to the doorstep of citizens. Point-of-Sale agents, already trusted and embedded in every community, could be trained and licensed to register Nigerians for TINs, turning every corner shop into a potential solution center. Even better would be an automatic linkage with the National Identity Number database, such that millions could simply receive a text message: “Dear Musa, your TIN is 123456789. Kindly link it with your bank to continue transactions.” That one innovation could save Nigerians from the usual queues and confusion.
Banks and fintechs must also play their role actively, not passively. Every mobile app notification, every ATM screen, every customer SMS could remind people to get their TIN today and avoid restrictions tomorrow. Fintech companies could go further by offering small incentives for compliance—₦200 airtime, fee waivers, or loyalty points—for customers who successfully link their TIN. People trust their banks more than they trust government circulars, so banks must lead this sensitization drive. And the time to begin is now, not in the frantic days of December 2025.
An untapped resource in this campaign is Nigeria’s army of corps members. Every year, thousands of young Nigerians under the NYSC scheme are deployed to communities far and near. If mobilized as TIN ambassadors, armed with simple digital tools, flyers, and branded shirts, they could educate and register thousands weekly. Their presence in both urban centers and remote villages makes them ideal for bridging the gap between policy and people. Involving them would turn a looming crisis into an opportunity for civic engagement.
Above all, Nigerians must understand that the TIN is not simply about taxation. It is about financial identity. In the years to come, your TIN may determine whether you can access loans, scholarships, pensions, social welfare, government grants, or mobile banking services. Just as BVN and NIN have become unavoidable, TIN will soon be at the heart of Nigeria’s financial system. This is why the 2026 deadline is not a distant date to ignore but an urgent call to action. Those who act now will glide smoothly into the new system; those who delay may wake up to frozen accounts, unpaid school fees, and businesses stranded for lack of access to cash.
Every Nigerian, from the student in Enugu to the tailor in Kano, must take a simple first step: check if you already have a TIN. Many do without knowing. If not, register immediately—online, at FIRS offices, through banks, or with community registration agents once they are deployed. Once you secure your TIN, update your bank account without delay. Then spread the word: tell your family, your neighbors, your trade union, your church group, your mosque, your WhatsApp contacts. A nation-wide chain of peer-to-peer awareness could save millions from the pain of waking up in 2026 to discover that their financial life is locked.
Nigeria is building a future where financial transparency and accountability are non-negotiable. But that future must not come at the cost of mass exclusion and suffering. Awareness, creativity, and solution-based implementation are the bridges we need to cross this transition safely. If we succeed, the TIN policy will not be remembered as a trap but as a turning point—a moment when Nigeria finally built a system where every citizen’s financial identity is secure, inclusive, and beneficial. But if we fail to act wisely, the policy may go down in history as another reform that punished the innocent more than it solved the problem.
The choice is clear. Nigerians must not wait for 2026 to humble them. The time to act is now, and the responsibility to spread the message belongs to everyone—government, banks, communities, churches, mosques, schools, markets, and individuals. In the new Nigeria, your TIN, not your cash, will decide whether your financial life is open or locked.
GOD BLESS THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA!
Professor Medaner wrote in from Abuja. He is reachable vis: info@medaner.com, justme4justice@yahoo.com





