The amendment made to Section 103(6) of the Inland Revenue Act through the Amendment Act, No. 11 of 2026, has effectively rendered Part B of the said Gazette Notification obsolete. Part B purported to require every individual above the age of 18 to obtain a TIN.
The amended provision now requires any person, regardless of age, to furnish a TIN certificate only when applying for specified services or undertaking designated transactions, such as opening a bank account, obtaining approval for a building plan, registering a motor vehicle, land, or business, renewing a vehicle license, transferring shares, or obtaining a credit card.
Had Parliament intended the possession of TIN to be mandatory for every individual above the age of 18, there would have been no necessity to specifically identify particular services and transactions for which TIN is required. The selective identification of these services clearly indicates that the obligation to obtain TIN is linked to those specified transactions rather than to age alone.
A useful comparison can be made with the National Identity Card (NIC). Since possession of an NIC is a collective legal requirement for every citizen above the prescribed age, the law does not separately identify specific occasions on which an NIC must be produced. The very fact that the amended law expressly specifies particular services and transactions requiring TIN demonstrates that Parliament did not intend to impose a blanket obligation on all individuals above 18 years of age to obtain one.
Need for database does not justify mandatory TIN registration for all adults
Some have argued that the requirement for all individuals above the age of 18 to obtain a TIN is not intended to impose or collect taxes from them directly. Rather, the objective is said to be the creation of a comprehensive database that would enable the IRD to cross-check information received from various sources and determine whether such individuals are liable for tax and, if so, whether they have complied with their tax obligations.
There is no disagreement regarding the importance of maintaining an accurate and comprehensive database for tax administration purposes. However, the point of contention lies in the method adopted to create such a database.
Requiring nearly 16 million individuals above the age of 18 to register with the IRD and obtain TIN is not only a colossal administrative undertaking but also an inefficient and impractical means of achieving the desired objective. It is akin to burning one’s hand while holding a spoon—an unnecessarily burdensome approach when simpler and more effective alternatives already exist. Expecting universal compliance from such a vast segment of the population is, at best, wishful thinking.
Lawful alternative to mass TIN registration
Recognising the need for information sharing between Government institutions, Parliament amended Section 123 of the Act through the Amendment Act, No. 45 of 2022. Under Section 123(6), the Commissioner General of Elections is required, upon request by the CGIR, to provide updated information relating to registered voters, including their names, addresses, and NIC numbers.
Accordingly, the CGIR already possesses a statutory mechanism to obtain the necessary details of virtually all adult citizens within a relatively short period of time. The required database can therefore be established through inter-agency information sharing, without compelling millions of individuals to undergo a separate registration process and without threatening ordinary citizens with fines, penalties, or potential criminal proceedings for non-compliance.
In these circumstances, the objective of maintaining a comprehensive taxpayer database can be achieved more efficiently, economically, and lawfully through existing statutory mechanisms rather than by imposing a blanket TIN registration requirement on every individual above the age of 18.
Conclusion
A careful reading of the Inland Revenue Act reveals that the obligation to register for a TIN originates from tax liability, not from the mere attainment of 18 years of age. Neither the Gazette Notification issued in 2023 nor the recent amendments introduced by the Inland Revenue (Amendment) Act, No. 11 of 2026 provide a sound legal basis for concluding that every individual above 18 years must obtain a TIN. On the contrary, the latest amendments indicate that Parliament has chosen a targeted approach by requiring TIN only in relation to specified transactions and services.
The objective of strengthening tax administration and maintaining a comprehensive database is both legitimate and necessary. However, such objectives must be pursued within the framework established by Parliament and through efficient administrative mechanisms that already exist in law.
Until Parliament expressly provides otherwise, the legal position remains clear: obtaining a TIN is not a collective obligation imposed on every individual based on the age, but a requirement that arises based on having taxable income as contemplated by the Inland Revenue Act.
(The author is a Retired Deputy Commissioner General of theInland Revenue Department, and can be reached via
[email protected])