FIRS Capital Gains Tax Real Estate Flips 2026 Clarification 10% Rate Deductions
The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) issued updated guidance in early 2026 clarifying the application of Capital Gains Tax (CGT) to short-term real estate flips (properties held for less than 2 years), confirming the standard 10% rate applies on the net gain after allowable deductions.
The clarification also reiterates existing exemptions for primary residences (owner-occupied homes) and certain long-term holds (generally >5 years with specific conditions). This guidance is particularly timely amid rising flip activity in Lagos, Abuja and emerging corridors in 2025–2026.
Key CGT Rules for Real Estate Flips (2026)
- Tax rate: 10% on net capital gain (sale price minus cost base and allowable deductions)
- Short-term flips (<2 years): Full 10% CGT applies — no reduced rate for short holds
- Exemptions:
- Primary residence (owner-occupied home) — exempt if held as principal place of abode
- Long-term holds (>5 years in certain cases) — partial or full relief possible if conditions met
- Net gain calculation: Sale proceeds – (Acquisition cost + Improvement expenses + Legal fees + Holding costs + Indexation allowance where applicable)
Allowable Deductions (Most Common in 2026)
- Acquisition cost (purchase price + stamp duty + registration fees)
- Improvement expenses (renovations, extensions, solar installations that add value)
- Legal & professional fees (lawyer, surveyor, agent commissions)
- Holding costs (ground rent, land use charge, maintenance during ownership)
- Incidental costs of disposal (agent fees, advertising, legal fees on sale)
Filing Deadlines & Penalties (2026)
- Due date: 6 months after disposal (sale completion date) — self-assessment return + payment
- Penalties for non-compliance:
- Late filing: ₦50,000 + 10% of tax due per month
- Late payment: 10% penalty + interest at CBN MPR + 10%
- Under-reporting: Up to 200% of tax due + possible prosecution
Real 2025–2026 Flip Examples (Tax Savings Potential)
Example 1 – Short Flip in Lekki (Lagos)
- Bought: ₦80M (2025)
- Improvements + costs: ₦12M
- Sold: ₦130M (6 months later)
- Net gain: ₦130M – (₦80M + ₦12M) = ₦38M
- CGT at 10%: ₦3.8M
- Tax savings potential: Proper deductions documented → reduced taxable gain by ₦2–5M (₦200k–₦500k savings)
Example 2 – Mid-Term Hold in Abuja
- Bought: ₦120M (2024)
- Improvements + costs: ₦18M
- Sold: ₦190M (18 months later)
- Net gain: ₦52M
- CGT: ₦5.2M
- Tax savings potential: Full allowable deductions + indexation → taxable gain reduced by ₦8–12M (₦800k–₦1.2M savings)
Action Steps for Flip Investors in 2026
- Keep detailed records from day 1 (purchase contract, receipts for all improvements, holding costs)
- Engage a tax advisor early (fees ₦200k–₦800k typically save far more)
- File within 6 months of sale — use FIRS e-filing portal
- Consider long-term hold (>5 years) or primary residence exemption where possible
Final Thoughts
The FIRS 2026 clarification reinforces that short-term real estate flips remain taxable at 10% on net gain — but allowable deductions can significantly reduce the liability.
Proper documentation and planning turn CGT from a major cost into a manageable expense, especially for flips in high-appreciation corridors.
Are you planning any flips in 2026? Which deduction are you most focused on maximizing? Share below!
Disclaimer: This information is for general purposes only and not legal advice. Consult a qualified real estate lawyer for guidance.
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