Binance Seeks Out-of-Court Settlement in $2 Billion Nigerian Tax Case
- Stacey George
- March 27, 2026
- Policy
- 0 Comments
Binance is actively pursuing an out-of-court settlement with Nigeria’s tax authorities over a $2 billion claim for unpaid taxes, marking a potential turning point in one of the largest regulatory enforcement actions ever brought against a cryptocurrency exchange.
The development emerged during a March 24, 2026 hearing before Federal High Court Judge Emeka Nwite in Abuja. Binance’s counsel, Sunday Agaji, confirmed that the exchange is “actively pursuing an amicable settlement with the Nigeria Revenue Service over four counts of alleged tax evasion,” according to reporting from Bitcoin.com.
Moses Ideho, Deputy Director of the NRS Legal Department, confirmed the approach from the other side: “Parties are actually exploring settlement,” he told the court. Judge Nwite adjourned the case to May 12, 2026, giving both sides time to report back on negotiation progress.
Inside Binance’s $2 Billion Nigerian Tax Dispute
The Nigeria Revenue Service claims Binance owes approximately $2 billion in unpaid Company Income Tax for 2022 and 2023, plus Value Added Tax. The exchange faces four criminal counts: failure to register and pay VAT, non-payment of corporate income tax, failure to file tax returns, and facilitating customer tax evasion.
The tax case, originally filed in February 2025, is only one front in a broader legal assault. A separate civil lawsuit before Justice Mohammed Umar seeks $79.5 billion in economic damages for alleged losses stemming from Binance’s unlicensed operations in Nigeria, bringing the combined civil claims to roughly $81.5 billion.
On top of that, Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission is pursuing a separate $35.4 million money laundering case. Binance’s Nigerian representative, Ayodele Omotilewa, has entered a not-guilty plea, while two other executives’ names were struck from the proceedings.
Nigeria ranks as one of Africa’s largest cryptocurrency markets by trading volume. The government has increasingly targeted crypto platforms it accuses of facilitating capital flight and undermining the naira. Binance’s former executive Tigran Gambaryan was detained in Nigeria in early 2024 before eventually being released, underscoring the high stakes of operating in the jurisdiction.

Why Binance Is Choosing Negotiation Over the Courtroom
Binance has a playbook for negotiated exits from regulatory confrontations. In 2023, the exchange reached a $4.3 billion settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice, resolving criminal charges that included money laundering and sanctions violations. That deal came with compliance commitments and leadership changes but allowed Binance to continue operating.
The Nigerian context is distinct. A prolonged court battle in a jurisdiction where Binance has already had an executive detained carries operational and reputational risk that extends well beyond the dollar figures involved. Settlement offers a path to resolve at least the criminal tax portion without the uncertainty of a trial.
What a deal might look like remains unclear. No specific settlement amount has been disclosed in court or in public reporting. It is also unknown whether negotiations cover only the $2 billion criminal tax claim or extend to the much larger $79.5 billion civil suit for economic damages.
The NRS’s openness to talks is notable. Ideho’s confirmation that both parties are exploring settlement suggests Nigerian authorities see a negotiated resolution as viable, though the government has shown no sign of abandoning its broader enforcement posture toward crypto platforms.

What a Settlement Could Signal for Crypto Regulation in Africa
The outcome of this case will be watched closely across the continent. Nigeria’s enforcement approach has already influenced how other African governments think about crypto exchange accountability and taxation.
Kenya, South Africa, and Ghana have each taken steps toward formalizing crypto tax frameworks in recent years. A successful negotiated settlement between Binance and Nigeria could establish a template for how emerging-market governments resolve disputes with global crypto platforms, one that prioritizes tax recovery over prolonged litigation.
Conversely, a breakdown in talks would signal that the courtroom remains the primary venue for these disputes, potentially chilling exchange operations across Africa’s growing crypto markets. The $81.5 billion in combined civil claims, if pursued to judgment, would represent an unprecedented sovereign enforcement action against any crypto company.
The next scheduled hearing on May 12, 2026 will reveal whether the settlement talks have produced concrete progress. Until then, the case remains a test of whether negotiation can resolve the tensions between global crypto exchanges and sovereign tax authorities in one of the world’s fastest-growing digital asset markets.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.