Lagos Revenue Surges to N2.6 Trillion as Internally Generated Income Climbs 18.5% in 2025
Nigeria’s commercial capital, Lagos State, recorded a total revenue haul of N2.6 trillion in 2025, marking a significant fiscal milestone driven largely by a sharp rise in internally generated revenue (IGR), according to state officials.
Authorities disclosed that the state’s IGR increased by 18.5 percent during the period under review, reinforcing Lagos’ position as Nigeria’s leading subnational economy and a major contributor to national economic activity.
The revenue performance reflects the state government’s continued expansion of its tax base, improved revenue collection mechanisms, digital reforms, and increased economic activities across sectors including trade, transportation, real estate, technology, and manufacturing.
Officials noted that Lagos has intensified efforts to strengthen fiscal sustainability by reducing dependence on federal allocations while boosting domestic revenue mobilization. Analysts say the development highlights the growing economic resilience of Lagos amid broader national economic pressures, including inflation, currency volatility, and rising public expenditure demands.
Over the years, Lagos has consistently ranked as Nigeria’s highest revenue-generating state due to its dense population, thriving private sector, strategic ports, and status as the country’s financial hub. Economic experts argue that the latest figures demonstrate the effectiveness of ongoing reforms aimed at improving tax compliance and widening the formal economic sector.
The revenue growth is also expected to support critical infrastructure investments, public transportation projects, healthcare expansion, education development, and urban renewal initiatives being pursued by the state administration.
Financial observers, however, caution that sustaining such revenue growth will depend on maintaining investor confidence, supporting small and medium-sized enterprises, improving ease of doing business, and addressing persistent infrastructure and housing challenges facing Africa’s most populous city.
Recent economic reforms introduced by the Lagos State Internal Revenue Service and the state government have focused heavily on digitized tax administration, enhanced compliance systems, and strategic public-private partnerships designed to strengthen long-term economic growth.
The announcement comes as Nigerian states increasingly seek innovative revenue generation models amid fluctuating oil revenues and economic diversification efforts across the country.







