KEY POINTS
- Heirs Technologies is now accredited by the Nigeria Revenue Service as an approved System Integrator for e Invoicing compliance
- The approval allows the company to link business invoicing systems to Nigeria’s national e Invoicing infrastructure
- The move aligns with broader tax reforms aimed at transparency, standardisation, and improved revenue collection.
The Nigeria Revenue Service has given Heirs Technologies the go-ahead to help Nigerian businesses set up the country’s mandatory e-Invoicing framework.
The NRS directory of authorised service providers lists the approval, which makes the company a System Integrator under the Merchant Buyer Solution.
Heirs Technologies can now connect business invoicing systems to Nigeria’s central e-Invoicing system. This will let them check invoices, send data securely, and report to the government.
The accreditation puts the tech company on a growing list of service providers that are helping the federal government modernise tax administration with digital tools.
E Invoicing central to tax reforms
The e-invoicing requirement in Nigeria is part of ongoing tax reforms that aim to make things more open, cut down on leaks, and make invoicing the same across all sectors. The framework says that businesses that meet certain criteria must send and confirm invoices through an approved electronic system that is linked to the tax authorities.
As implementation spreads, more businesses are being brought into the compliance net. This creates a need for technical partners who can handle system integration while also following the rules.
Heirs Technologies said that moving to e-invoicing is more than just putting in new software; it also affects finance operations, tax governance, and internal controls.
George Njuguna, chief technology and innovation officer at Heirs Technologies, said, “E-invoicing is basically a compliance requirement that affects finance, taxes, operations, and technology.” “To be successful, you need to be able to integrate systems well and know exactly what your tax and regulatory duties are.”


