Preparing for Nigeria’s New Tax Regime (2026) as Architects. For years, many architects in Nigeria have survived on improvisation — mixing personal and business finances, paying for site expenses from their own pockets, invoicing casually, and hoping everything “balances out” at the end of the year. That era is over. From January 1, 2026, Nigeria enters a new tax regime — one that does not attack creativity, but exposes weak systems. And for architects, this shift goes far beyond compliance. ...
All content for SILL TALKS is the property of Egbeiyon Leonard and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Preparing for Nigeria’s New Tax Regime (2026) as Architects. For years, many architects in Nigeria have survived on improvisation — mixing personal and business finances, paying for site expenses from their own pockets, invoicing casually, and hoping everything “balances out” at the end of the year. That era is over. From January 1, 2026, Nigeria enters a new tax regime — one that does not attack creativity, but exposes weak systems. And for architects, this shift goes far beyond compliance. ...
011 VISIBILITY; ARCHITECTS TICKET TO GETTING HIGH PAYING PROJECTS
SILL TALKS
29 minutes
4 months ago
011 VISIBILITY; ARCHITECTS TICKET TO GETTING HIGH PAYING PROJECTS
In today’s architectural landscape, technical skill and creative brilliance are no longer enough on their own. Many highly skilled architects continue to struggle with low-paying work, not because they lack talent, but because they lack visibility. The truth is simple: clients cannot value or hire who/what they cannot see. In this episode of The SILL TALKS PODCAST, we examine the crucial role visibility plays in positioning architects for bigger, better, and higher-paying opportunities. Visib...
SILL TALKS
Preparing for Nigeria’s New Tax Regime (2026) as Architects. For years, many architects in Nigeria have survived on improvisation — mixing personal and business finances, paying for site expenses from their own pockets, invoicing casually, and hoping everything “balances out” at the end of the year. That era is over. From January 1, 2026, Nigeria enters a new tax regime — one that does not attack creativity, but exposes weak systems. And for architects, this shift goes far beyond compliance. ...