Can a Foreigner Own a Company in Nigeria?
Yes. Nigeria allows full foreign ownership in most sectors. You don't need a Nigerian partner. You don't need a Nigerian co-director. The Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC) Act guarantees foreign investors the same legal protections as Nigerian citizens, including the right to take your profits out of the country.
There are restrictions. A few sectors are completely closed to foreigners — arms manufacturing and narcotics, for example. Others like oil and gas, telecoms, and fintech have extra licensing rules and sometimes require a percentage of local ownership. Check the NIPC's negative list for your specific sector before you start.
One rule applies to everyone: foreigners cannot register a Business Name (sole proprietorship) in Nigeria. You must incorporate a limited liability company. Almost all foreign investors use a Private Limited Company (Ltd) — it limits your personal liability and is the simplest structure to run.
Step 1 — Incorporate with the CAC
The Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) handles all company registrations in Nigeria under the Companies and Allied Matters Act 2020 (CAMA 2020). The process is fully online at cac.gov.ng.
Start by searching and reserving your company name. The search costs ₦500. Your reservation is valid for 60 days. Pick two or three name options — names with 'National', 'Government', or 'Nigeria' in them take much longer to approve.
Once your name is approved, you need to prepare and submit these documents:
Form CAC 1.1 — the main application form
Memorandum and Articles of Association (MEMART) — your company's rules and objectives
Form CAC 7 — details of all directors (names, nationalities, addresses)
Form CAC 4 — share capital structure
Form CAC 8.1 — shareholder details
Consent letters from each director
Statement of Compliance
Valid passport copies for all foreign directors and shareholders
Important: any company with foreign participation must have a minimum declared share capital of ₦100 million. This doesn't need to be fully paid up immediately, but it must be declared correctly from day one.
Stamp duty is roughly 0.75% of share capital. Once approved, CAC issues your Certificate of Incorporation electronically. A Tax Identification Number (TIN) from the Nigeria Revenue Service is usually generated at the same time. If it isn't, apply directly to the NRS.
A straightforward, well-prepared application typically takes 10 to 20 working days. Errors in your documents are the biggest cause of delays — so get a CAC-accredited lawyer or consultant to prepare the paperwork.
Step 2 — Register with the NIPC
This is the step most foreign investors don't know about — and the most dangerous to skip. Under Section 20 of the NIPC Act, every company with foreign shareholders must register with the Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission after incorporation. Without it, your company can't legally operate as a foreign-owned entity. Some banks will flag or freeze your account if you can't show an NIPC Business Registration Certificate.
To register, submit your CAC Certificate, MEMART, shareholder information, investment profile, and financial projections to the NIPC. If you're in a regulated sector, include your sector licence too.
The NIPC updated its fees in October 2024. Here's what you'll pay in 2026:
Application fee: ₦150,000 (up from ₦15,000 previously)
Annual renewal fee: ₦50,000 — payable every January from 2025 onward
Replacement certificate: ₦100,000
The annual renewal is new and important. NIPC registration used to be a one-time thing. Now it must be renewed every year. If you miss it, you lose your registered status and your access to federal investment incentives. Renewal is done online and takes less than a week if your tax and CAC filings are up to date.
Step 3 — Bring in Your Capital and Open a Bank Account
If you're bringing money into Nigeria to fund your company, you need a Certificate of Capital Importation (CCI). Your Nigerian bank issues this through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) when your foreign funds arrive. The CCI is your legal proof that the money came in properly — and it's what allows you to take profits out of Nigeria later. Don't spend the money before the CCI is issued.
To open a corporate bank account, bring your CAC Certificate, TIN, NIPC registration certificate, and proof of address. Some banks also want to see your CCI. Get all three documents sorted before you walk into a bank — this is the correct sequence.
What About Bringing in Foreign Staff?
If you or any foreign employee will be based in Nigeria, you need two things: an Expatriate Quota from the Federal Ministry of Interior, and a Combined Expatriate Residence Permit and Aliens Card (CERPAC) for each foreign employee.
Apply for the Expatriate Quota as soon as your company is incorporated — don't wait until you need to bring someone in. It runs in parallel with your NIPC registration and can take several weeks.
The 2026 Disclosure Rule You Must Know
From 2026, all registered companies must report their Persons with Significant Control (PSC) to the CAC's Open Ownership Register. A PSC is anyone who holds 5% or more of shares or voting rights, or who otherwise controls the company — directly or through another entity.
This builds on the beneficial ownership rules already in CAMA 2020, ss.119–121. If you own your Nigerian company through an offshore holding company or nominee arrangement, review your structure before registering. Hiding ownership in 2026 is not just risky — it's a compliance failure from day one.
Tax Rates in 2026
A few numbers worth knowing before you build your financial model:
Corporate income tax: 25% from 2026 (down from 27.5% in 2025)
VAT: 7.5%
Development Levy: 4% of assessable profits (replaces several previous levies)
The Pioneer Status Incentive (PSI) — the old tax holiday scheme — is no longer accepting applications as of 10 November 2025. It's being replaced by the Economic Development Tax Incentive (EDTI) under the Nigeria Tax Act 2025. As of March 2026, detailed EDTI guidance hasn't been formally published yet. Check with the NIPC directly before factoring any incentive into your projections.
The 9 Steps — In Order
Follow this sequence. Getting the order wrong is the most common cause of delays:
Reserve your company name on the CAC portal — prepare two or three options
Prepare your MEMART and all statutory forms — use a CAC-accredited lawyer
Submit your incorporation application and pay CAC fees and stamp duty
Register with the NIPC immediately after getting your CAC certificate
Apply for your Expatriate Quota from the Ministry of Interior if needed
Remit your foreign capital through a CBN-authorised bank and get your CCI before spending
Open your corporate bank account with CAC Certificate, TIN, NIPC certificate, and CCI
Register for VAT with the Nigeria Revenue Service
Diarise your annual NIPC renewal — it's due every January, costs ₦50,000, and requires current tax and CAC filings
Common Mistakes to Avoid
* Registering a Business Name instead of a limited liability company — foreigners aren't allowed to do this
* Declaring less than ₦100 million share capital — this is the legal minimum for any company with foreign participation
* Skipping NIPC registration — this is one of the most common errors and can get your bank account flagged
* Not getting a CCI before repatriating profits — without it, getting money out becomes legally complicated
* Missing the annual NIPC renewal — it's new from 2025, it costs ₦50,000, and ignoring it means losing your registered status
* Failing to file annual returns with the CAC — even dormant companies must file, or risk being struck off the register
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