Nigeria’s tax administration system is poised for another major digital transition as the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) prepares to replace its existing TaxProMax platform with a new portal, Rev360, scheduled to go live on April 30.
The development signals the next phase of the country’s tax modernisation drive, with officials describing Rev360 as a more advanced platform built to simplify compliance, improve transparency, and enhance the taxpayer experience.
TaxProMax, launched in June 2021 by the then Federal Inland Revenue Service under the provisions of the Finance Act 2020, marked a watershed in Nigeria’s tax administration by automating tax return filing and payment processes. It provided taxpayers with a one-stop digital channel for registration, filing returns, tax remittances, withholding tax management, capital allowance administration, and downloading tax clearance certificates.
The platform also enabled companies to file Value Added Tax and Companies Income Tax returns online, replacing largely manual processes that had long slowed compliance.
However, TaxProMax’s rollout was not without challenges. Early users reported registration delays, system glitches, and technical bottlenecks, prompting the tax authority to extend filing deadlines in 2021 to accommodate taxpayers. Many users also complained of complex navigation, document upload limits, and intermittent downtime during peak filing periods.
With Rev360, analysts say the NRS appears determined to address those limitations while aligning with global standards in digital revenue administration.
Preliminary details indicate that Rev360 is expected to feature faster processing speeds, more intuitive navigation, improved taxpayer communication channels, stronger data integration, and better transparency across tax obligations and payments.
Rev360 is also expected to support the NRS’s broader revenue mobilisation agenda at a time when the government is under pressure to raise non-oil earnings, reduce leakages, and improve fiscal sustainability.
Tax consultants noted that, if properly implemented, the platform could shorten filing times, reduce disputes, improve voluntary compliance, and boost confidence in the tax system.
Still, stakeholders caution that success will depend on system stability, taxpayer education, responsive support services, and a smooth migration from TaxProMax.
For many taxpayers, the transition from TaxProMax to Rev360 may represent more than a change of portal—it could mark the beginning of a smarter, more efficient, and more accountable tax administration regime in Nigeria.









