Nigeria’s 2026 tax reforms have fundamentally changed how remote workers and foreign income earners are taxed. Under the Nigeria Tax Act 2025, the era of flying under the radar has ended. If you’re working remotely for foreign companies, earning from international platforms, or receiving foreign income while living in Nigeria, this comprehensive guide explains your tax obligations under the new regime.
Table of Contents
- Overview: Remote Work Taxation Revolution
- Who is Affected: Remote Workers and Foreign Income
- Tax Residency Rules: The 183-Day Test
- Worldwide Income Taxation for Residents
- Non-Resident Taxation Rules
- Tax Rates and Calculations
- Self-Assessment and Filing Requirements
- Double Taxation Relief
- Exemptions and Reliefs
- Compliance Requirements
- Penalties for Non-Compliance
- Practical Examples and Calculations
- Frequently Asked Questions
Overview: Remote Work Taxation Revolution
The Nigeria Tax Act 2025 has brought clarity to a previously gray area: taxation of remote workers and foreign income. The law explicitly states: “The income, gains or profits of an individual who is a resident of Nigeria are deemed to accrue in Nigeria and are chargeable to tax in Nigeria wherever they arise, and whether or not the income, profits or gains have been brought into or received in Nigeria.”
Key Changes from 2026
Before 2026
- Unclear rules on foreign income taxation
- Many remote workers operated in a gray area
- Limited enforcement of foreign income reporting
- Fragmented tax collection system
From 2026 Onwards
- Clear worldwide income taxation for Nigerian residents
- Mandatory self-declaration for remote workers
- Digital monitoring of foreign income flows
- Severe penalties for non-compliance
- Advanced data sharing with foreign tax authorities
Legal Foundation
The remote work taxation framework is established under:
– Nigeria Tax Act 2025 – Chapter Two: Taxation of Income of Persons
– Nigeria Tax Administration Act 2025 – Filing and compliance requirements
– 183-day residency test – Determining tax obligations
– Double Taxation Agreements – Preventing dual taxation
Who is Affected: Remote Workers and Foreign Income
Remote Workers Covered by New Rules
1. Traditional Remote Employees
- Nigerian residents working for foreign companies
- Full-time remote employees with foreign employers
- Contract workers on long-term foreign assignments
- Digital nomads spending significant time in Nigeria
2. Freelancers and Independent Contractors
- Platform workers (Upwork, Fiverr, Freelancer.com)
- Independent consultants serving foreign clients
- Content creators earning from global platforms
- Graphic designers, writers, developers working internationally
3. Digital Economy Participants
- YouTube creators monetizing content
- Social media influencers with international reach
- Cryptocurrency traders earning from global markets
- E-commerce operators selling to international markets
- Online course creators with global audiences
4. Investment and Passive Income
- Foreign investment returns (dividends, interest, capital gains)
- Rental income from foreign properties
- Royalties from intellectual property
- Foreign pension or retirement income
Income Sources Subject to Taxation
Employment-Related Foreign Income
- Salaries and wages from foreign employers
- Bonuses and commissions paid by foreign companies
- Stock options and equity compensation from foreign entities
- Consulting fees from international clients
- Director fees from foreign boards
Platform and Digital Income
Platform earnings from YouTube, Upwork, Fiverr, etc. Influencer revenue or ad revenue from social platforms:
– Freelancing platform earnings (Upwork, Fiverr, 99designs)
– Content monetization (YouTube, TikTok, Instagram)
– Online marketplace sales (Etsy, Amazon, eBay)
– Subscription service income (Patreon, OnlyFans)
– Cryptocurrency trading profits and mining income
Investment and Business Income
- Foreign business profits and partnership distributions
- International real estate rental and capital gains
- Foreign securities dividends and interest
- Intellectual property royalties and licensing fees
- Foreign currency trading and forex profits
Tax Residency Rules: The 183-Day Test
Determining Your Tax Residency Status
Your tax obligations depend entirely on whether you’re classified as a Nigerian tax resident. Residency is based on the 183-day rule (cumulative days of physical presence in Nigeria within a 12-month period).
The 183-Day Rule Explained
A person qualifies as a Nigerian resident if, within a tax year, they are domiciled in Nigeria, have a permanent place of residence in Nigeria, have substantial economic and family ties in Nigeria, or are physically present in Nigeria for an aggregate of 183 days in a 12-month period.
Key aspects of the 183-day test:
– Rolling 12-month period (not calendar year)
– Any 12-month period counts (e.g., March 2026 to February 2027)
– Cumulative days including weekends and holidays
– Partial days count as full days
– All visits count regardless of purpose
Additional Residency Factors
Beyond the 183-day rule, residency can also be determined by:
– Domicile in Nigeria – Your permanent home base
– Permanent place of residence – Maintained accommodation in Nigeria
– Substantial economic ties – Business interests, investments, income sources
– Family ties – Spouse, children, or dependents residing in Nigeria
Practical Residency Scenarios
Scenario 1: Clear Resident
- Physical presence: 250 days in Nigeria in 2026
- Status: Nigerian tax resident
- Tax obligation: Worldwide income taxable in Nigeria
Scenario 2: Clear Non-Resident
- Physical presence: 90 days in Nigeria in 2026
- Primary residence: United States
- Status: Non-resident for tax purposes
- Tax obligation: Only Nigerian-source income taxable
Scenario 3: Borderline Case
- Physical presence: 180 days in Nigeria in 2026
- Maintained apartment: In Lagos
- Family: Spouse and children in Nigeria
- Status: Likely resident due to additional ties
- Tax obligation: Worldwide income may be taxable
Worldwide Income Taxation for Residents
Scope of Worldwide Income Taxation
If you are a Nigerian tax resident, you are liable for tax on your worldwide income, regardless of:
– Where the income is earned
– Which currency it’s paid in
– Whether it’s brought into Nigeria
– Whether the payer is Nigerian or foreign
Types of Foreign Income Subject to Tax
Employment Income from Foreign Sources
- Remote work salaries from US, UK, European companies
- Consulting fees from international clients
- Speaking fees at foreign conferences
- Training and workshop income from abroad
- Board membership fees from foreign companies
Business and Professional Income
- Online business profits regardless of customer location
- Professional services rendered to foreign clients
- E-commerce sales to international customers
- Software development projects for foreign companies
- Digital marketing services for global brands
Investment and Passive Income
- Foreign bank account interest and dividends
- International stock market gains and dividends
- Foreign real estate rental income and capital gains
- Cryptocurrency trading profits and staking rewards
- Foreign bond interest and capital appreciation
Digital Platform Income
- YouTube ad revenue and channel memberships
- Twitch streaming income and donations
- Podcast sponsorship and advertising revenue
- Online course sales through international platforms
- Stock photography sales through global platforms
Income Conversion Requirements
Under the new law, your taxable income must be calculated using the official exchange rate published by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN):
– CBN official rate must be used for conversion
– Date of receipt determines applicable exchange rate
– Monthly average rates may be used for regular income
– Proper documentation required for exchange rate used
Non-Resident Taxation Rules
Limited Tax Liability for Non-Residents
If you’re classified as a non-resident, you’re only taxed on Nigerian-source income:
Non-residents are taxed only on income derived from Nigeria (e.g., rental income, dividends, business profits).
Nigerian-Source Income for Non-Residents
What Constitutes Nigerian-Source Income
- Employment in Nigeria – Work performed within Nigerian borders
- Nigerian business operations – Permanent establishment in Nigeria
- Nigerian property – Rental income from Nigerian real estate
- Nigerian investments – Dividends from Nigerian companies
- Nigerian services – Professional services rendered in Nigeria
Remote Work Considerations for Non-Residents
Remote workers are taxed based on the rules in the country where they are resident or earn such income, not merely where payment is made.
Key principles for non-residents:
– Work location matters – Where services are performed
– Payment source is secondary – Where payment comes from is less important
– Residency country rules – Follow tax rules where you’re resident
– Limited Nigerian tax – Only on genuine Nigerian-source activities
Exemptions for Non-Residents
Income earned abroad and brought into Nigeria by a non-resident individual is now specifically exempted from tax in Nigeria, regardless of whether tax was paid abroad or not.
Specifically exempted for non-residents:
– Foreign employment income – For work done outside Nigeria
– Foreign business profits – From operations outside Nigeria
– Foreign investment returns – From non-Nigerian sources
– Pension and retirement income – From foreign sources (unless for Nigerian work)
Tax Rates and Calculations
Progressive Tax Rate Structure
The new tax system applies progressive rates to all income, including foreign income:
| Annual Income Range | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| ₦0 – ₦800,000 | 0% |
| ₦800,001 – ₦3,200,000 | 15% |
| ₦3,200,001 – ₦6,400,000 | 18% |
| ₦6,400,001 – ₦12,800,000 | 21% |
| ₦12,800,001 – ₦25,600,000 | 24% |
| Above ₦25,600,000 | 25% |
Allowable Deductions
Before calculating tax, you can claim these deductions:
– Pension contributions (8% of gross income)
– National Housing Fund (2.5% of gross income)
– Life assurance premiums (up to ₦100,000)
– Rent relief (20% of gross income, capped at ₦500,000)
– National Health Insurance Scheme contributions
– Mortgage interest on owner-occupied property
Sample Tax Calculation for Remote Worker
A Nigerian resident earning $2,000 monthly (approximately ₦2.98 million monthly, or ₦35.72 million annually) from a US-based remote job pays roughly 23% tax (₦684,599 monthly) after deductions.
Detailed calculation:
– Gross annual income: ₦35,720,000 (at ₦1,490/$1)
– Less: Pension (8%): ₦2,857,600
– Less: NHF (2.5%): ₦893,000
– Less: Rent relief: ₦500,000 (maximum)
– Taxable income: ₦31,469,400
– Annual tax liability: Approximately ₦8,215,188
– Effective tax rate: ~23%
Self-Assessment and Filing Requirements
Mandatory Self-Declaration
If you are a remote worker, you are a worker. You work for a company, which may be American or European, and you earn a salary; you will self-declare it because if that company were to be in Nigeria, it would deduct and pay on your behalf. The obligation falls on you to self-declare.
Self-Assessment Process
1. Income Declaration
- Calculate total worldwide income in Nigerian Naira
- Apply CBN official exchange rates for foreign currency conversion
- Include all income sources regardless of where earned
- Document income with supporting evidence
2. Deduction Claims
- Claim allowable deductions with proper documentation
- Calculate taxable income after deductions
- Apply progressive tax rates to determine tax liability
- Credit any foreign taxes paid (where applicable)
3. Filing Requirements
Unlike employees in Nigerian companies whose employers deduct their Pay-As-You-Earn (PAYE) from their monthly gross salary, remote workers and freelancers have the responsibility to remit and file their tax returns.
Filing obligations include:
– Annual tax return filing by June 30
– Quarterly estimated payments (if required)
– Supporting documentation for all income and deductions
– Foreign tax credit claims where applicable
Required Documentation
Income Documentation
- Employment contracts or service agreements
- Payment records and bank statements
- Platform payment summaries (PayPal, Payoneer, Wise)
- Client invoices and receipts
- Currency conversion records using CBN rates
Expense and Deduction Records
- Business expense receipts for deductible items
- Home office expenses (if claiming deductions)
- Professional development costs
- Equipment and software purchases for work
- Foreign tax payment certificates
Double Taxation Relief
Available Relief Mechanisms
Nigeria has implemented several mechanisms to prevent double taxation on foreign income:
Nigeria has Double Taxation Agreements (DTAs) with several countries, and the new tax laws provide for unilateral relief where a DTA does not exist to ensure that the same income is not taxed twice.
1. Double Taxation Treaties (DTTs)
Nigeria has Double Taxation Treaties with 15 countries, including the UK, Canada, China, France, and South Africa. Tax paid abroad can be credited against Nigerian tax liability.
Treaty countries include:
– United Kingdom – Comprehensive income and capital gains coverage
– Canada – Business profits and employment income relief
– South Africa – Investment and business income agreements
– China – Trade and investment tax coordination
– France – Professional services and employment coverage
2. Unilateral Relief
Where no DTT exists, the law provides unilateral relief to prevent the same income being taxed twice:
– Foreign tax credit for taxes paid abroad
– Credit limited to Nigerian tax on same income
– Proper documentation required for foreign tax payments
– Annual election required for credit claims
How Double Taxation Relief Works
Example: UK Employment Income
- Earn £50,000 working for UK company remotely from Nigeria
- UK taxes paid: £7,500 (15% rate)
- Nigerian tax liability: ₦15,000,000 (on ₦74,500,000 equivalent)
- Relief mechanism: Credit UK tax against Nigerian liability
- Net Nigerian tax: Reduced by UK tax credit
Documentation Required for Relief
- Foreign tax payment certificates
- Official tax assessment from foreign country
- Currency conversion documentation
- Income source verification
- Treaty claim forms (where applicable)
Exemptions and Reliefs
Income Exemptions
Genuine Personal Transfers
Personal remittances (money sent home for support or gifts) are not subject to tax:
– Family support money sent by relatives abroad
– Gift transfers without service obligations
– Refund payments (flight cancellations, etc.)
– Community contributions for social purposes
Educational and Charitable Transfers
- Scholarship payments for educational purposes
- Charitable donations received for personal use
- Religious offerings and community support
- Emergency assistance for family or health needs
Tax-Free Thresholds
Annual Income Exemption
The first ₦800,000 of your annual income is now tax-free, regardless of source:
– Universal application to all income types
– Foreign and domestic income combined
– No separate thresholds by income type
– Annual basis not monthly calculation
Capital Gains Exemptions
- Share sales under ₦150 million annually (with gains under ₦10 million)
- Reinvestment relief for proceeds invested in Nigerian companies
- Principal residence capital gains relief
- Small business asset disposal relief
Professional and Business Reliefs
Home Office Deductions
- Reasonable proportion of home costs for business use
- Utilities and internet costs for work purposes
- Equipment depreciation for work-related assets
- Professional development and training costs
Business Travel and Expenses
- Client meeting travel and accommodation
- Conference and training attendance costs
- Professional software and equipment
- Banking and transaction fees for business
Compliance Requirements
Registration and TIN Requirements
Tax Identification Number (TIN)
- Mandatory registration for all remote workers earning foreign income
- Automatic assignment through BVN/NIN for individuals
- Required for filing and all tax-related transactions
- Penalties for non-registration: ₦50,000 first month, ₦25,000 subsequent months
Platform Registration
- State tax authority registration for self-employed individuals
- Federal registration may be required for certain income types
- Multiple platform reporting may require federal filing
- Business registration for incorporated entities
Record Keeping Requirements
Minimum Documentation Standards
Documents such as invoices, client contracts, bank receipts, and proof of foreign withholding tax are all crucial:
- Income records: All payment confirmations and receipts
- Client contracts: Service agreements and work descriptions
- Bank statements: Showing foreign income receipts
- Exchange rate documentation: CBN rates used for conversion
- Tax payment receipts: Foreign tax payments for credit claims
Retention Periods
- Tax returns: 6 years from filing date
- Supporting documents: 6 years minimum retention
- Banking records: 6 years for audit purposes
- Client contracts: Duration of contract plus 6 years
Ongoing Compliance Obligations
Annual Filing Requirements
- June 30 deadline for individual tax returns
- Self-assessment calculation of tax liability
- Payment by filing deadline to avoid penalties
- Amended returns if errors discovered
Quarterly Obligations
- Estimated tax payments for large income earners
- VAT filing if applicable to business activities
- Withholding tax compliance for business payments
- Currency conversion updates for regular income
Penalties for Non-Compliance
Registration Penalties
If you fail to register with Nigeria’s tax authority, you’ll incur a fine of ₦50,000 in the first month, followed by ₦25,000 for every subsequent month.
Filing Penalties
Failing to file returns will incur a fine of ₦100,000 in the first month, followed by ₦50,000 for every subsequent month.
False Declaration Penalties
Tax authorities will investigate the information provided, and false declarations can result in fines of up to ₦1 million or a prison term of up to three years, or both.
Enhanced Enforcement Mechanisms
Digital Monitoring
- Bank account monitoring linked to BVN/NIN
- International data sharing with foreign tax authorities
- Platform payment tracking through digital systems
- Currency flow analysis for unexplained income
Investigation Powers
If you now refuse to declare, the government will see the movement of the money, and they will deem it as your income, charge you tax on it, add a penalty, and interest for the late payment.
Enhanced powers include:
– Bank account scrutiny for undeclared income
– Platform payment verification through data requests
– International cooperation for income verification
– Asset investigation for lifestyle vs. declared income analysis
Practical Examples and Calculations
Example 1: Full-Time Remote Worker
Profile: Software developer working for US company
– Salary: $5,000/month ($60,000/year)
– Residency: Lives in Lagos full-time (365 days in Nigeria)
– Exchange rate: ₦1,500/$1 (CBN rate)
Tax calculation:
– Gross income: ₦90,000,000 annually
– Less deductions: ₦7,700,000 (pension, NHF, rent relief)
– Taxable income: ₦82,300,000
– Tax liability: ₦19,975,000
– Effective rate: ~22.2%
– Monthly tax: ₦1,664,583
Example 2: Freelancer on Multiple Platforms
Profile: Graphic designer working on Upwork, Fiverr, 99designs
– Annual income: $25,000 (₦37,500,000 at ₦1,500/$1)
– Residency: Nigerian resident (280 days in Nigeria)
– Business expenses: ₦2,000,000 (software, equipment)
Tax calculation:
– Gross income: ₦37,500,000
– Less business expenses: ₦2,000,000
– Less personal deductions: ₦3,500,000
– Taxable income: ₦32,000,000
– Tax liability: ₦7,520,000
– Effective rate: ~20.1%
Example 3: Digital Nomad (Borderline Residency)
Profile: Content creator traveling between Nigeria and other countries
– Time in Nigeria: 180 days in 2026
– YouTube income: $15,000/year
– Other ties: Maintains apartment in Lagos, family in Nigeria
Tax analysis:
– Residency status: Likely resident due to maintained ties
– Tax obligation: Worldwide income taxable
– Income: ₦22,500,000 (at ₦1,500/$1)
– After deductions: ₦19,000,000
– Tax liability: ₦3,070,000
– Effective rate: ~13.6%
Example 4: Non-Resident Nigerian Abroad
Profile: Nigerian living and working in Canada
– Time in Nigeria: 45 days visiting family
– Canadian employment: CAD 80,000
– Nigerian rental income: ₦2,400,000
Tax analysis:
– Residency status: Non-resident
– Canadian income: Not taxable in Nigeria
– Nigerian rental: Taxable at progressive rates
– Tax on rental: ₦240,000 (15% rate after exemption)
– Total Nigerian tax: ₦240,000 only
Frequently Asked Questions
General Questions
Q: I work remotely for a US company but live in Nigeria. Do I need to pay Nigerian tax?
A: Yes. If you’re a Nigerian tax resident (physically present for 183+ days), you must declare and pay tax on your worldwide income, including US employment income.
Q: Can I avoid Nigerian tax by keeping my money offshore?
A: No. Nigerian residents are taxed on worldwide income regardless of where the money is kept or whether it’s brought into Nigeria.
Q: What if my foreign employer already deducts tax?
A: You still must file Nigerian returns and declare the income. You can claim foreign tax credits to avoid double taxation, but filing is mandatory.
Q: Do I need to pay tax on cryptocurrency profits earned from foreign exchanges?
A: Yes. Cryptocurrency gains are taxable income. The new law takes your net gains minus losses, and you pay tax like any other income.
Residency Questions
Q: I spend exactly 183 days in Nigeria. Am I a tax resident?
A: The 183-day rule uses “183 days or more,” so exactly 183 days makes you a tax resident. However, other factors like permanent home and family ties also matter.
Q: I’m traveling constantly. How do I count the 183 days?
A: Count any day you’re physically present in Nigeria, even partially. Track all entry and exit dates across rolling 12-month periods, not just calendar years.
Q: Can I structure my visits to avoid the 183-day rule?
A: While technically possible, you must also consider other residency factors like domicile, permanent home, and economic ties. Professional advice is essential for complex situations.
Q: I have dual citizenship. Does this affect my tax obligations?
A: Dual citizenship has no impact on tax status. Residency is determined solely by physical presence and other connection factors, not citizenship.
Filing and Compliance
Q: When do I need to file my first tax return?
A: By June 30, 2027, for the 2026 tax year. However, register for TIN immediately and consider quarterly payments for large income amounts.
Q: What exchange rate should I use for converting foreign income?
A: Use the CBN official exchange rate. For regular monthly income, you can use monthly average rates. Document which rates you use.
Q: Can I file jointly with my spouse if they’re not a Nigerian resident?
A: Nigerian tax law doesn’t provide for joint filing. Each individual files separately based on their own residency status and income.
Q: What if I discover I made an error in my filing?
A: File an amended return as soon as possible. Voluntary corrections typically receive better treatment than corrections discovered during audits.
Income and Deductions
Q: Can I deduct home office expenses for remote work?
A: Yes, you can deduct reasonable business expenses, including a proportion of home costs used exclusively for work purposes.
Q: Are gifts from family members abroad taxable?
A: No. Genuine personal transfers such as family remittances and gifts are not treated as taxable income.
Q: What about income from multiple countries?
A: All foreign income must be declared. Use double taxation treaties and unilateral relief provisions to avoid being taxed twice on the same income.
Q: Can I claim foreign tax credits for taxes paid abroad?
A: Yes. Foreign taxes paid can be credited against your Nigerian tax liability, limited to the Nigerian tax on the same income.
Platform and Digital Income
Q: Do I need to report small amounts from platforms like YouTube?
A: Yes. All income must be reported regardless of amount. However, you may not owe tax if your total income is below ₦800,000 annually.
Q: What about income in cryptocurrencies?
A: Cryptocurrency income must be converted to Naira using CBN rates and included in your tax return. Keep detailed records of all transactions.
Q: Are subscription payments from platforms taxable?
A: Yes. All platform income (Patreon, OnlyFans, etc.) is taxable income that must be declared and converted to Naira.
Q: What if the platform doesn’t provide tax documents?
A: You’re responsible for tracking and reporting all income regardless of whether formal tax documents are provided. Use platform statements and payment records.
Penalties and Enforcement
Q: What happens if I haven’t filed returns before but have been earning foreign income?
A: Register for TIN immediately and file returns for the current year. The NRS may require back filing, but voluntary disclosure typically receives better treatment.
Q: Can the Nigerian government access my foreign bank accounts?
A: Nigeria is establishing data-sharing arrangements with over 100 countries. Your foreign income is increasingly visible through international cooperation.
Q: What if I can’t afford to pay the calculated tax?
A: Contact the NRS to discuss payment plans. Don’t ignore the obligation – penalties and interest continue to accrue until resolved.
Q: Are there any amnesty programs for remote workers?
A: While no specific amnesty has been announced, voluntary disclosure before detection typically results in reduced penalties. Consult a tax professional for guidance.
Conclusion: Navigating the New Remote Work Tax Landscape
Nigeria’s 2026 tax reforms have ended the era of ambiguity around remote work taxation. The message is clear: Nigerian tax residents must declare and pay tax on their worldwide income, regardless of where it’s earned or how it’s received.
Key Takeaways
Universal Application
- All remote workers earning foreign income are affected
- Residency status determines the scope of tax liability
- Self-declaration is mandatory, with severe penalties for non-compliance
- Digital monitoring makes evasion increasingly difficult and risky
Practical Compliance Steps
- Determine your residency status using the 183-day rule and other factors
- Register for TIN if you haven’t already done so
- Track all foreign income and maintain detailed records
- Calculate tax liability using current CBN exchange rates
- File returns by June 30 annually, even if no tax is owed
- Claim foreign tax credits to avoid double taxation where applicable
- Seek professional advice for complex situations
Benefits of Compliance
- Legal certainty and peace of mind
- Access to financial services and government benefits
- Professional credibility and business opportunities
- Avoid severe penalties and enforcement actions
- Contribute to national development while maintaining global career opportunities
Looking Forward
The new tax regime reflects Nigeria’s commitment to capturing tax on income earned by its residents, regardless of source. While this may seem burdensome, it also provides clarity and certainty that was previously lacking.
Success strategies include:
– Proactive compliance rather than reactive responses
– Professional support for complex tax situations
– Detailed record-keeping for all income and expenses
– Regular monitoring of residency status and tax obligations
– Strategic planning for tax-efficient income management
The digital economy has created unprecedented opportunities for Nigerians to earn global income while living at home. The 2026 tax reforms ensure that this income contributes to national development while providing clear rules for compliance.
Remember: The goal isn’t to avoid tax obligations but to meet them efficiently while maximizing legitimate deductions and credits. With proper planning and compliance, remote workers can continue to thrive in the global economy while fulfilling their Nigerian tax obligations.
This guide provides general information only and does not constitute tax advice. Tax situations can be complex, and rules may change. For specific guidance on your situation, consult qualified tax professionals or contact the Nigeria Revenue Service directly.
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