Nigeria sets new record as FAAC shares N2.22trn in August

Spread the love

The Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) has shared an unprecedented N2.225 trillion among the three tiers of government and statutory recipients for August 2025, setting a new record in revenue distribution.

The payout, which surpasses July’s figures, marks the second month in a row that FAAC disbursements have crossed the N2 trillion threshold, underscoring a surge in federally collected revenues during President Bola Tinubu’s administration.

The revenue, shared at the August 2025 FAAC meeting in Abuja, was buoyed by increases in oil and gas royalty, value-added tax (VAT), and common external tariff (CET) levies, according to a communiqué issued at the end of the meeting.

Out of the N2.225 trillion total distributable revenue, FAAC said N1,478.593 trillion came from statutory revenue, N672.903 billion from VAT, N32.338 billion from the Electronic Money Transfer Levy (EMTL), and N41.284 billion from Exchange Difference.

The communiqué revealed that gross federation revenue for the month stood at N3.635 trillion. From this amount, N124.839 billion was deducted as cost of collection, while N1,285.845 trillion was set aside for transfers, interventions, refunds, and savings.

Read also:FAAC: FG, States, LGs share N2trn July revenue

From the statutory revenue of N1.478 trillion, the Federal Government received N684.462 billion, State Governments received N347.168 billion, and Local Government Councils received N267.652 billion. A further N179.311 billion (13 per cent of mineral revenue) went to oil-producing states as derivation revenue.

From the distributable VAT revenue of N672.903 billion, the Federal Government received N100.935 billion, the states received N336.452 billion, while the local governments got N235.516 billion.

Of the N32.338 billion shared from EMTL, the Federal Government received N4.851 billion, the States received N16.169 billion, and the Local Governments received N11.318 billion.

From the N41.284 billion exchange difference, the federal government received N19.799 billion, the states received N10.042 billion, and the local governments received N7.742 billion, while N3.701 billion (13 per cent of mineral revenue) was shared to the oil-producing states as derivation.

Related Posts

Former UNILORIN VC, Prof. Ambali dies at 68

Spread the love

Spread the loveThe University of Ilorin community has been thrown into mourning following the death of its former Vice-Chancellor, Professor AbdulGaniyu Ambali, who died at the age of 68. The…

Kebbi farmers trapped as Bandits demand ₦40m access fee to farmlands

Spread the love

Spread the loveResidents of several farming communities in Bena District, Danko/Wasagu Local Government Area of Kebbi State, are reportedly living in fear after armed groups allegedly imposed a ₦40 million…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *