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Tanzania Central Government Revenue & Expenditure
April 11, 2026  
Tanzania Government Budgetary Operations 2026 | Central Revenue & Expenditure | TICGL TICGL Home › TICGL Economic › Government Budgetary Operations 2026 Bank of Tanzania · March 2026 · Fiscal Analysis Tanzania Central GovernmentRevenue & Expenditure "A forensic breakdown of Tanzania's budgetary operations — how much the government collected, what it spent, and what the […]
Tanzania Government Budgetary Operations 2026 | Central Revenue & Expenditure | TICGL
Bank of Tanzania · March 2026 · Fiscal Analysis

Tanzania Central Government
Revenue & Expenditure

"A forensic breakdown of Tanzania's budgetary operations — how much the government collected, what it spent, and what the numbers reveal about fiscal health and investment climate in 2026."

📅 Reporting Period: January 2026 💰 Total Revenue: TZS 3,340.2 Bn 🏛️ Total Expenditure: TZS 3,751.7 Bn 📊 Source: Bank of Tanzania
Total Revenue (Jan 2026)
3,340.2
Bn TZS ▲ +5.4% vs target
Tax Revenue (Jan 2026)
2,762.3
Bn TZS ▲ +7.1% vs target
Total Expenditure (Jan 2026)
3,751.7
Bn TZS — Recurrent + Dev
Development Expenditure
1,061.8
Bn TZS (28.3% of total)
Non-Tax Revenue
394.1
Bn TZS — 87.9% of target
Central Government Revenue

How Much Did Tanzania Collect in January 2026?

Domestic revenue collections in January 2026 remained robust at TZS 3,340.2 billion — surpassing the monthly target by 5.4%. Central Government revenue alone reached TZS 3,156.4 billion, reflecting strengthened tax administration and improved taxpayer compliance across all major categories.

Headline Result: Total domestic revenue of TZS 3,340.2 billion exceeded the January 2026 target by 5.4%. Central Government revenue of TZS 3,156.4 billion was driven primarily by tax revenue at TZS 2,762.3 billion — beating its target by 7.1%. Only non-tax revenue fell short, reaching 87.9% of its target at TZS 394.1 billion.
Central Government Revenue: Actuals vs Estimates vs Prior Year (January)
Billions of TZS — All revenue categories side-by-side
REVENUE COMPARISON
Source: Ministry of Finance, Bank of Tanzania — Table A2 & Chart 2.5.1
Revenue Performance vs Monthly Target — January 2026
Actual collected as % of the monthly target for each category
TARGET ACHIEVEMENT
Taxes on Imports TZS 1,072.95 Bn  |  Target: 977.16 Bn  |  +9.8% above target
Income Tax TZS 850.79 Bn  |  Target: 747.08 Bn  |  +13.9% above target
VAT & Excise on Local Goods TZS 622.57 Bn  |  Target: 661.39 Bn  |  -5.9% below target
Other Taxes TZS 216.02 Bn  |  Target: 193.31 Bn  |  +11.7% above target
Non-Tax Revenue TZS 394.05 Bn  |  Target: 909.72 Bn  |  -56.7% below target
Source: Ministry of Finance, Bank of Tanzania — January 2026 Budget Operations. Note: Full-year budget non-tax target is TZS 4,681.7 Bn; single-month target shown here is proportional estimate.
Revenue Composition — January 2026
Share of each revenue category in total collections
COMPOSITION
Source: Bank of Tanzania — Table A2 Computations
Revenue Growth Trend — Jul 2025 to Jan 2026 (Cumulative)
Monthly cumulative actual vs estimate (Bn TZS)
YTD TREND
Source: Ministry of Finance — Table A2 (July–January 2026 YTD)
Tax Revenue Analysis

Tax Revenue: TZS 2,762.3 Billion — 7.1% Above Target

Tanzania's tax performance in January 2026 demonstrates the effectiveness of ongoing TRA reforms and digital tax administration systems. Three of four tax categories exceeded their monthly targets, led by a strong surge in income tax collections.

Tax Revenue by Category — 3-Year January Comparison
Jan 2025 Actual vs Jan 2026 Estimate vs Jan 2026 Actual (Bn TZS)
3-YEAR VIEW
Source: Ministry of Finance — Chart 2.5.1 data
Tax Revenue YoY Growth by Category
% change between January 2025 actual and January 2026 actual
YoY GROWTH
Source: Ministry of Finance — Bank of Tanzania Computations

📊 TICGL Revenue Intelligence: What's Driving Tax Outperformance?

Income tax collections grew robustly year-on-year, outpacing the target by 13.9% — reflecting broad-based expansion in formal sector employment, buoyant private sector credit (up 24.4%), and the Bank's specialized credit facilities for SMEs that are widening the taxable base. Import duties at +9.8% above target signal sustained trade momentum and rising import values, particularly in capital goods and industrial supplies. These trends suggest tax buoyancy above 1.0 — meaning tax revenue is growing faster than the economy, a positive signal for fiscal sustainability.

Annual Full-Year Tax Revenue Progress — FY 2025/26 (July–January)
Actual collected vs full-year budget target. 7 months into the fiscal year.
ANNUAL PROGRESS
Total Tax Revenue
Actual: TZS 20,302.6 BnBudget: TZS 32,176.0 Bn63.1% achieved
Taxes on Imports
TZS 7,171.7 BnBudget: TZS 11,563.0 Bn62.0% achieved
Income Tax
TZS 8,004.0 BnBudget: TZS 11,367.9 Bn70.4% achieved
VAT & Excise (Local)
TZS 3,774.1 BnBudget: TZS 7,016.5 Bn53.8% achieved
Other Taxes
TZS 1,352.7 BnBudget: TZS 4,887.7 Bn27.7% achieved
Source: Table A2 — 7-month cumulative actuals against FY 2025/26 annual budget target
Non-Tax Revenue

Non-Tax Revenue: TZS 394.1 Billion — Below Target at 87.9%

Non-tax revenue in January 2026 reached TZS 394.1 billion — falling short of the monthly target by 12.1%. This performance reflects timing differences in fee collection and payments from state-owned enterprises, though it remains substantially higher than the TZS 347.8 billion collected in January 2025.

Context: Non-tax revenue shortfalls are common in Tanzania's January period, partly due to the timing of dividends, license renewals, and government service fees. Despite the miss against the monthly target, year-on-year non-tax revenue for January grew by 13.3% compared to TZS 347.8 billion in January 2025, indicating underlying structural improvement.
Non-Tax Revenue vs Tax Revenue Share
Proportional contribution to total Central Government revenue (Jan 2026)
REVENUE MIX
Source: Ministry of Finance — Table A2 January 2026 data
Non-Tax Revenue: Actual vs Target vs Prior Year
January period comparison (Bn TZS)
NON-TAX TREND
Source: Ministry of Finance — Table A2 & Chart 2.5.1
Government Expenditure

Total Expenditure: TZS 3,751.7 Billion in January 2026

The Government continued to align spending with available resources. Total expenditure of TZS 3,751.7 billion was split between recurrent commitments (TZS 2,689.9 billion, 71.7%) and development investment (TZS 1,061.8 billion, 28.3%), maintaining a consistent focus on infrastructure and capital formation.

Expenditure Balance: The revenue-expenditure gap in January 2026 was TZS 411.5 billion (before grants), financed through a mix of domestic and foreign borrowing. After grants of TZS 3,548 million, the overall balance stood at TZS -107.2 billion, financed primarily through domestic securities issuance and foreign project loans.
Central Government Expenditure: Actuals vs Estimates vs Prior Year (January)
Billions of TZS — Wages, Interest, Other Recurrent & Development
EXPENDITURE BREAKDOWN
Source: Ministry of Finance, Bank of Tanzania — Chart 2.5.2 & Table A2 (Provisional 2026 figures)
Expenditure Composition — January 2026
% share of total TZS 3,751.7 Bn spent
COMPOSITION
Source: Ministry of Finance — Table A2 January 2026
Recurrent vs Development Expenditure Trend
Monthly actual split — July 2025 to January 2026 (Bn TZS)
TREND
Source: Ministry of Finance — Table A2 Monthly breakdown
Development vs Recurrent Split

What Is Tanzania's Government Spending Money On?

Understanding the composition of government spending is crucial for investors. A higher development expenditure ratio signals infrastructure expansion, while the recurrent structure reveals fiscal rigidity and the cost of running government operations.

Expenditure Waterfall — January 2026 vs January 2025 vs Budget Estimate
All four expenditure lines stacked for comparative view (Bn TZS)
WATERFALL COMPARISON
Source: Ministry of Finance, Bank of Tanzania — Table A2

🔍 Recurrent Expenditure: What Makes Up TZS 2,689.9 Billion?

Of total recurrent spending, wages & salaries accounted for TZS 1,097.5 billion (40.8%), interest payments for TZS 492.6 billion (18.3%), and other goods, services, and transfers TZS 1,099.9 billion (40.9%). Interest payments of TZS 492.6 billion (down from an estimate of TZS 548.2 billion) reflect better-than-projected debt servicing conditions — partly supported by declining Treasury bill yields, which fell from 11.93% in February 2025 to 5.68% in February 2026.

Recurrent Expenditure Sub-Components
January 2026 — Bn TZS breakdown of TZS 2,689.9 Bn
RECURRENT DETAIL
Source: Table A2 — Wages, Interest (domestic + foreign), Other goods & services
Interest Payments: Domestic vs Foreign (Jul 2025–Jan 2026)
Stacked monthly interest cost (Bn TZS)
DEBT SERVICE
Source: Table A2 — Interest payments (domestic: TZS 385.99 Bn; foreign: TZS 106.57 Bn)
Development Expenditure: Local Funding vs Foreign Funding (Jul–Jan 2026)
How development projects are financed — domestic vs external resources (Bn TZS)
DEV FINANCING
Source: Ministry of Finance — Table A2 (Local dev: TZS 801.0 Bn; Foreign dev: TZS 260.7 Bn in Jan 2026)
Year-to-Date Performance

7-Month Fiscal Year Progress: July 2025 – January 2026

Cumulative performance against the full-year FY 2025/26 budget provides a clearer picture of fiscal trajectory and whether Tanzania is on track to meet its annual revenue and expenditure targets.

Cumulative Revenue vs Expenditure vs Budget (Jul 2025 – Jan 2026)
Actuals vs 7-month pro-rated estimates vs full-year budget (Bn TZS)
YTD OVERVIEW
Source: Ministry of Finance — Table A2 (YTD: July–January 2026)
Revenue: TZS 24,596.3 Bn Collected (7 Months)
Cumulative actual revenue of TZS 24,596.3 billion exceeded the 7-month estimate of TZS 23,806.5 billion — an outperformance of 3.3%. This is 60.8% of the full-year budget target of TZS 40,466.1 billion, broadly on track for a fiscal year with 7 of 12 months complete (58.3%).
⚠️
Expenditure: TZS 27,511.4 Bn Spent (7 Months)
Cumulative actual expenditure of TZS 27,511.4 billion was below the 7-month estimate of TZS 29,051.0 billion — an underspend of 5.3%. This may reflect project implementation delays in development expenditure, which has been a recurring pattern in Tanzania's fiscal execution.
📉
Development Spending: TZS 9,557.9 Bn (7 Months)
Development expenditure of TZS 9,557.9 billion was 86.5% of the 7-month estimate of TZS 11,052.9 billion. This underspend is partly due to slower disbursement of foreign project loans (TZS 1,906.9 Bn actual vs TZS 2,974.8 Bn estimate), which warrants monitoring for project delivery timelines.
🏦
Financing: Domestic vs Foreign Mix
Net foreign financing of TZS 1,697.3 billion was below the estimate of TZS 2,014.8 billion, while net domestic financing of TZS 1,845.1 billion was below the TZS 2,636.3 billion estimate — indicating lower-than-planned borrowing overall, a positive signal for debt sustainability.
Data Tables

Complete Budget Data — Full Reference Tables

All figures sourced directly from the Bank of Tanzania March 2026 Monthly Economic Review, Table A2 (Central Government Operations). All values in Billions of TZS unless stated.

Table 1: Central Government Revenue — January 2026 (Billions of TZS)

Revenue CategoryFY 2025/26 Annual BudgetJul–Jan 2026 EstimateJul–Jan 2026 ActualJan 2026 EstimateJan 2026 ActualJan 2025 ActualYoY Changevs Target
Total Revenue (incl. LGAs)40,466.123,806.524,596.33,624.13,340.2+5.4% ▲
Central Govt Revenue36,857.722,821.223,638.53,488.73,156.4
Total Tax Revenue32,176.018,518.220,302.62,578.92,762.3+9.9% ▲+7.1% ▲
  Taxes on Imports11,563.06,884.77,171.7977.21,073.0839.4+27.8% ▲+9.8% ▲
  Income Tax11,367.96,378.78,004.0747.1850.8677.7+25.5% ▲+13.9% ▲
  VAT & Excise (Local Goods)7,016.53,866.03,774.1661.4622.6553.0+12.6% ▲-5.9% ▼
  Other Taxes4,887.71,388.91,352.7193.3216.0152.3+41.8% ▲+11.7% ▲
Non-Tax Revenue4,681.74,303.03,335.9909.7394.1347.8+13.3% ▲-56.7% ▼
LGA Own Sources1,680.5985.3957.8135.4183.8+35.7% ▲
Grants1,069.9577.2511.186.83.5-96.0% ▼

Table 2: Central Government Expenditure — January 2026 (Billions of TZS)

Expenditure CategoryFY 2025/26 Annual BudgetJul–Jan 2026 EstimateJul–Jan 2026 ActualJan 2026 EstimateJan 2026 ActualJan 2025 ActualYoY Change
Total Expenditure48,775.029,051.027,511.44,146.03,751.7
Recurrent Expenditure31,281.317,998.117,953.52,694.82,689.971.7% of total
  Wages & Salaries10,917.57,581.77,590.51,101.41,097.5942.5+16.4% ▲
  Interest Payments (Total)6,493.73,655.73,174.9548.2492.6375.1+31.3% ▲
    of which: Domestic3,697.32,153.32,149.7373.8386.0
    of which: Foreign2,796.41,502.51,025.2174.4106.6
  Other Goods, Services & Transfers7,088.66,760.77,188.11,045.11,099.91,040.4+5.7% ▲
Development Expenditure17,493.711,052.99,557.91,451.21,061.71,218.1-12.8% ▼
  Local Development12,117.88,078.17,651.0934.2801.0
  Foreign-Funded Development5,375.92,974.81,906.9517.1260.7

Table 3: Fiscal Balance & Financing — January 2026 (Billions of TZS)

ItemFY BudgetJul–Jan EstimateJul–Jan ActualJan EstimateJan Actual
Balance Before Grants-8,308.9-5,244.5-2,915.0-522.0-411.5
Grants1,069.9577.2511.186.83.5
Overall Balance (After Grants)-7,239.0-4,651.1-3,542.5-435.2-107.2
Foreign Financing (Net)4,286.32,014.81,697.3101.318.0
  Loan Drawdowns5,966.44,327.93,496.8440.3257.2
  Amortization (Repayments)-4,389.7-2,341.4-1,819.7-339.0-239.1
Domestic Financing (Net)2,952.62,636.31,845.1333.889.1
  Bank Borrowing2,466.12,201.9239.0278.873.9
  Non-Bank (Net of Amortization)486.5434.41,606.255.015.3

Note: Positive financing = government borrowing; negative = repayments/deposit build-up. Source: Bank of Tanzania — Table A2 (Ministry of Finance data). Actual 2026 figures are provisional.

TICGL Strategic Analysis

What Do These Budget Numbers Mean for Tanzania?

TICGL's assessment of Tanzania's fiscal position and its implications for investors, businesses, and development partners operating in Tanzania.

🇹🇿 TICGL Overall Fiscal Assessment — January 2026

Tanzania's fiscal performance in January 2026 reveals a government that is collecting more than expected (revenue +5.4% vs target) while spending less than budgeted (expenditure -9.2% vs estimate). This combination narrows the budget deficit and reduces domestic borrowing pressure — which in turn helps keep Treasury bill yields down (5.68% in Feb 2026 vs 11.93% in Feb 2025) and lowers the cost of private sector credit. For investors, this fiscal prudence is a strong signal of macroeconomic stability and government capacity to maintain development spending without crowding out private investment.

📈
Strong Tax Buoyancy: Positive for Growth Signal
Tax revenue growing 9.9% above the January estimate — and income tax up 25.5% year-on-year — signals a broadening formal economy. This tax buoyancy (taxes growing faster than GDP) creates fiscal space for government investment without raising rates.
🏗️
Development Spending Undershoot: A Flag for Project Delivery
Development expenditure of TZS 1,061.7 billion was 26.9% below the January estimate of TZS 1,451.2 billion. This is partly due to delayed foreign loan disbursements (only TZS 260.7 Bn vs TZS 517.1 Bn estimated). Infrastructure investors should monitor project disbursement rates as a leading indicator of contract award timelines.
💡
Interest Cost Compression: A Fiscal Dividend
Interest payments of TZS 492.6 billion were TZS 55.6 billion below the January estimate, reflecting declining Treasury bill yields. As T-bill rates fall (from 11.9% to 5.7%), the government saves on debt service — creating more fiscal space for productive spending. This is partly the dividend of Tanzania's low and stable inflation.
🔴
Non-Tax Revenue: A Structural Vulnerability
Non-tax revenue of TZS 394.1 billion was 56.7% below the monthly estimate, continuing a pattern of non-tax underperformance. With the full-year target at TZS 4,681.7 billion, only TZS 3,335.9 billion has been collected in 7 months — 71.3% of what was needed by this point. Diversifying non-tax revenue sources is a key fiscal reform priority.

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