The Budget office of the Federation has promised that a full-year 2024 Budget Performance Report will be released by end-September 2025, plus consolidated first and second quarter 2025 reports, and then follow up with quarterly publications on schedule.
The Budget Office of the Federation also assured Nigerians of its commitment to transparency and timely reporting, while explaining that the delay in publishing Budget Implementation Reports (BIRs) since second quarter of 2024 shows the attention taken to ensure accuracy during Nigeria’s transition to an extended fiscal framework.
A statement from the Budget Office on Friday said it is also strengthening monitoring systems and digital integration to guarantee future reports are timely, credible, and of the highest integrity.
“This delay should not be seen as backsliding, but as a reflection of the care taken to ensure accuracy and credibility in Nigeria’s fiscal reporting during an exceptional budget cycle.
By the end of September 2025, we will publish the full-year 2024 Budget Performance Report alongside the outstanding Q1–Q2 2025 reports, after which quarterly releases will resume on schedule. Our commitment to transparency, timeliness, and accountability remains unwavering.”
The statement said ‘We reaffirm our commitment to transparency, accountability, and timely disclosure in fiscal reporting, adding ”The Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA) requires the Budget Office to publish quarterly BIRs, and we acknowledge this statutory obligation and remain committed to both the letter and the spirit of the law: accuracy, timeliness, and credibility in public finance.
It further stated “We therefore urge stakeholders to see the temporary delay not as backsliding, but as a reflection of the care taken to ensure accuracy, coherence, and credibility in Nigeria’s fiscal reporting during an exceptional budget.
The delay in publication is due to two key factors, namely, Verification and Reconciliation Processes – BIRs are not merely accounting summaries; they integrate expenditure data with physical verification of projects nationwide. These verification missions and reconciliations with implementing agencies took longer than anticipated, given the scale and geographic spread of appropriated projects.
Even before the extension was formally passed, policy discussions were already pointing toward a lengthened budget horizon. Issuing reports on the old cycle, only to have them overtaken by a revised implementation framework, would have created conflicting datasets and misled stakeholders.
The statement further stated, “As a result, reporting timelines were temporarily adjusted to preserve coherence and accuracy in fiscal disclosures, and
“To bridge the gap, and restore predictability, the Budget Office is taking the following steps:I.A provisional Budget Performance Report for FY 2024 will be released by the end of September 2025.
‘This interim publication, based on verified funding commitments, will provide a reliable snapshot of fiscal performance while detailed project-level verification continues through 2025.’
As a stop gap measure over the delay, “Beginning with Q3 2025, all BIRs will be published on schedule in line with FRA requirements. For Q1 and Q2 2025, which are already past due, the Budget Office will release consolidated reports alongside the full-year 2024 update, thereby restoring compliance with statutory timelines.
