President Bola Tinubu will present the 2026 Appropriation Bill to a joint session of the National Assembly on Friday, December 19, 2025, at 2:00 p.m., according to official correspondence from the legislature’s administrative leadership.
The budget presentation, which represents the government’s fiscal blueprint for the coming year, will follow standard protocol requiring formal presidential notification to lawmakers one day prior to the address.
A letter dated December 17, 2025, signed by Admiral Essien Eyo Essien, Secretary for Human Resources and Staff Development, on behalf of the Clerk to the National Assembly, Kamoru Ogunlana, confirmed the arrangements and outlined strict security procedures for the presidential visit.
The communication, which was distributed to the Deputy Clerk and all departmental heads, specified that the President would exercise his constitutional authority as Commander-in-Chief to personally deliver the proposed budget to the legislature.
According to the administrative directive, lawmakers are expected to receive formal communication about the President’s scheduled appearance during Thursday’s plenary session, giving members advance notice to prepare for the joint sitting.
The letter detailed comprehensive security and access protocols designed to ensure smooth proceedings during the high-profile event, which typically attracts significant public and media attention.
“All accredited persons” are required to be at their duty posts by 11:00 a.m. on Friday, with access to the National Assembly complex becoming restricted immediately thereafter, according to the directive.
The administrative notice explicitly warned that “non-accredited persons” should stay away from the complex entirely on the day of the budget presentation, reflecting heightened security consciousness during presidential visits.
Additional logistical arrangements outlined in the communication addressed vehicle parking restrictions affecting National Assembly staff members.
Except for the Clerk, Deputy Clerk, Clerk of the House, Clerk of the Senate, and their respective deputies, all other staff were instructed to park their vehicles “at designated areas at the Annex or the new car park by the National Assembly Service Gate.”
The parking directive aims to ease congestion within the main legislative complex and facilitate movement during the President’s visit and the influx of dignitaries expected to attend the budget presentation.
The annual budget address represents one of the most significant constitutional interactions between the executive and legislative branches of government, setting the stage for months of appropriations debates, committee hearings, and negotiations.
President Tinubu’s 2026 budget proposal will outline the government’s revenue projections, expenditure priorities, and policy directions across all sectors of the economy at a time when Nigeria faces multiple fiscal challenges.
The administration is expected to address issues including security funding amid persistent insurgency and banditry, infrastructure development needs, debt service obligations, and implementation of controversial tax reforms scheduled to take effect in 2026.
Lawmakers will scrutinize the proposals through sectoral committees before the National Assembly passes the final appropriation, typically with modifications reflecting legislative priorities and constituent concerns.
The 2026 fiscal year represents a critical period for the Tinubu administration as it approaches the midpoint of its four-year term, with budget execution performance likely to influence public perceptions ahead of the 2027 electoral cycle.
Economic analysts will closely examine the budget’s assumptions regarding oil production levels, exchange rate projections, inflation expectations, and revenue targets—all of which have proven optimistic in previous fiscal plans.
The President’s budget speech typically lasts between 30 and 45 minutes, covering macroeconomic frameworks, sectoral allocations, and policy initiatives the government considers priorities for the coming year.
Following the presentation, Senate President Godswill Akpabio and House Speaker Tajudeen Abbas will deliver responses on behalf of their respective chambers before the appropriation bill formally begins its legislative journey through committee review and floor debates.
The National Assembly traditionally aims to pass the budget before the end of the calendar year to allow for early implementation when the new fiscal year begins on January 1, though delays have been common in previous years.



















