Ikeja Electric (IE) has moved to douse consumer anxiety following a notice regarding the mandatory submission of Tax Identification Numbers (TIN).
In a clarifying statement issued Friday, February 13, 2026, the DisCo confirmed that the directive is a strict Business-to-Business (B2B) requirement, affecting only corporate customers, vendors, and strategic partners, not residential household consumers.
The move is a direct response to the Nigeria Tax Act (NTA) 2025, which has introduced a more aggressive digital trail for corporate transactions and VAT verification.
For Ikeja Electric, the data update isn’t just about tax; it is an evolution of their Know Your Business (KYB) and Know Your Customer (KYC) procedures.
By linking TINs to corporate accounts, the DisCo is aligning its internal database with the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) portal.
Digital Invoicing: Under the NTA 2025, supplier invoices must now carry specific metadata, including the company’s Tax ID and Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) registration number.
The NRS Portal: The implementation framework requires all corporate invoices to be uploaded and validated on the NRS portal.
For this automated validation to occur, the recipient’s (corporate customer’s) Tax ID is a mandatory data field.
Strategic Compliance vs. Operational Friction
The initial notice, which set a February 20 deadline, sparked fears of mass service suspensions.
However, IE has clarified that the deadline is a compliance milestone for business entities to ensure their invoices remain “tax-valid” under the new law.
“The notice applies strictly to corporate customers (B2B), as well as our vendors and strategic business partners,” the company stated. “The customer’s Tax ID becomes mandatory for processing and verification where validated invoices are transmitted through the [NRS] portal.”
The Digitization of the Nigerian Tax Rail
This directive is a textbook example of the “Invisible Infrastructure” shift highlighted in recent financial blueprints like The Re-Architecture Project.
By mandating TINs for B2B transactions, the government is effectively turning utility companies into data-gathering nodes for the NRS.
For businesses, this means that electricity bills are no longer just operational costs; they are now verifiable tax documents.
Failure to provide a TIN wouldn’t just risk a “service suspension“, it would essentially make it impossible for a company to claim VAT input or legitimate business expenses on their utility spend, as the invoice would fail NRS validation.
Residential users can breathe easy, but for the corporate sector, the message is clear: the era of anonymous business utility consumption is over.
The post Ikeja Electric Clarifies TIN Mandate is a B2B Compliance Play, Not for Households appeared first on Tech | Business | Economy.

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