A rigorous, data-driven assessment of the FY2026/27 fiscal proposals — who bears the burden, what remains unaddressed for private investment, and whether Tanzania is building a sustainable revenue base or simply squeezing existing taxpayers harder.
With global aid shrinking and the government committed to self-financing, the 2026/27 budget is fundamentally about extracting more from the existing tax base while attempting selective protection of domestic industry.
Tanzania's Finance Minister, Ambassador Khamis Mussa Omar, presented the FY2026/27 Budget Speech to the National Assembly on 11 June 2026 — a budget totalling TZS 62.33 trillion, the largest in the country's history and a 10.3% increase over the previous year's budget of TZS 56.49 trillion.
The budget theme — "Building a resilient economy through digital transformation, strategic investment, and sustainable fiscal policies for inclusive economic growth" — signals ambition. But the mechanics of how that resilience is to be financed tells a different story: nearly every major law covering tax and revenue has been amended to raise rates, broaden taxable bases, or close exemptions.
This analysis dissects those measures through the lens of the ordinary Tanzanian — the smallholder farmer, the bodaboda rider, the small trader, the salaried employee — and asks the critical structural question: Is Tanzania building a tax system that incentivises economic activity, or one that increasingly taxes whatever activity already exists?
Official Development Assistance (ODA) is projected to fall by a dramatic 39.1% in 2026/27 compared to pledges for 2025/26. This is a structural, not temporary, shift — reflecting geopolitical realignments among major donors. The government's response is correct in principle: domesticate the revenue base. The question is how.
The 2026/27 budget is the most ambitious spending plan Tanzania has presented. Understanding its architecture is essential to judging its sustainability.
| Budget Line | 2025/26 (TZS Bn) | 2026/27 (TZS Bn) | Change | % of Total Budget |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tax Revenue | 32,660 | 37,022 | +13.4% | 59.4% |
| Development Partners (Aid/Grants) | 925 | 563 | -39.1% | 0.9% |
| Non-Tax & LGA Revenue | ~7,800 | 9,206 | +18.0% | 14.8% |
| Wages & Benefits | 7,710 | 10,127 | +31.4% | 16.2% |
| Goods & Services | 7,810 | 5,215 | -33.2% | 8.4% |
| Interest Payments | 14,210 | 6,860 | -51.7% | 11.0% |
| Grants & Subsidies | ~23,980 | 25,320 | +5.6% | 40.6% |
| Capital Investment | ~2,780 | 2,329 | -16.2% | 3.7% |
| Budget Deficit | ~15,100 | 7,707 | -49.0% | 2.9% of GDP |
| TOTAL BUDGET | 56,490 | 62,334 | +10.3% | 100% |
The Finance Bill 2026 amends at least 20 different laws. Below is a comprehensive analysis of the most impactful changes, grouped by law and assessed for citizen welfare effects.
| Measure | Direction | Revenue Impact (TZS M) | Who Is Affected? | Welfare Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VAT refunds paid within 30 days; taxpayer earns interest if delayed | Relief | — | All VAT-registered businesses | Positive: reduces cash flow burden on traders |
| Boarding passes exempt from VAT | Exempt | — | Airline travellers | Neutral — treaty compliance measure |
| Dairy packaging materials (HS 3920.20.90) VAT-exempt | Exempt | −17.8 | Dairy processors; milk consumers | Mildly positive: could lower milk prices |
| Remove time limit on VAT deferment for capital goods | Relief | — | Manufacturers & investors importing machinery | Strongly positive for investment |
| EV charging station equipment VAT-exempt (HS 8504.40.00) | Exempt | −5,970 | EV infrastructure investors | Positive for green transition |
| Aircraft engines & tyres VAT-exempt | Exempt | −14,840 | Airlines; passengers (via lower fares) | Positive for aviation sector |
| LPG smart meters VAT-exempt | Exempt | −16.8 | LPG distributors; cooking gas users | Positive: supports affordable clean cooking |
| Locally-produced edible oil VAT exemption extended | Exempt | — | All households buying cooking oil | Positive: maintains consumer price relief |
| Locally-grown cotton garments VAT-exempt | Exempt | +6,300 (refund saved) | Textile manufacturers; cotton farmers | Positive for domestic value chain |
| VAT removed from imported fishing nets; added on polyester yarn for nets | Restructure | +2,550 | Fishing industry; Lake Zone communities | Mixed: lower production cost, higher import cost |
| Pet food (HS 23.09) VAT exemption removed | New Tax | +6,730 | Pet owners (predominantly urban middle class) | Limited: narrow consumer segment |
| Mining framework agreement VAT exemptions codified | Exempt | — | Mining joint ventures | Positive for large FDI mining projects |
| Measure | Direction | Revenue Impact (TZS Bn) | Affected Population | Welfare Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-year income tax holiday for new small businesses (presumptive regime) | Relief | — | New entrepreneurs entering formal sector | Strongly positive: reduces startup burden |
| Presumptive regime threshold raised from TZS 100M to 200M | Relief | — | SMEs with turnover TZS 100–200M | Positive: aligns with VAT registration threshold |
| Presumptive tax rate raised from 3.5% to 4.5% (turnover TZS 11M–200M) | Increase | +75.11 | ~700,000+ small traders, vendors, mechanics | Negative: a 28.6% rate hike on small businesses |
| Digital services withholding tax (foreign providers): 2% → 3% | Increase | +1.44 | Online shoppers; digital service users | Small but signals intent to tax digital economy |
| Deemed retained earnings (undistributed profits) WHT: 30% → 15% | Decrease | −23.59 | Companies; shareholders | Positive for investment retention & reinvestment |
| Forest product royalties (varnish, latex, resin, sap) taxed at 2% | New Tax | +0.43 | Forest collectors & traders | Extends tax to informal forest economy |
| Sports/football federation royalties WHT: 5% → 10% | Increase | +1.44 | Football organisations (ultimately affects fees) | Limited direct citizen impact |
| All government entities to withhold income tax on domestic purchases | New Tax | — | All suppliers to government | Cash flow risk for small government contractors |
| Advance tax 1% on crop buyers (agricultural produce) | New Tax | +99.87 | Agricultural commodity buyers & intermediaries | Risk of being passed to farmers as lower farm-gate prices |
| WHT 1% on purchases of live animals, raw fish, unprocessed milk | New Tax | +49.49 | Livestock keepers, fishers, dairy farmers | Could depress prices received by smallholders |
| Income Tax Act aligned with mining framework agreements | Relief | — | Mining investors | Positive for large-scale mining FDI |
| Product / Category | Old Rate | New Rate | Revenue (TZS Bn) | Citizen Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Specific excise duty rates (beer, spirits, tobacco, soft drinks, etc.) — annual adjustment | Previous specific rate | +8% for 2026/27; then CPI+2% annually | +251.54 | Higher prices for beer, cigarettes, soft drinks; inflation pass-through |
| Motorcycles (excluding EV, CNG, ambulance) | 0% | 5% | +30.40 | Higher cost of bodaboda purchase; transport fares may rise |
| Used cars (8–10 years old) | 15% | 20% | +106.70 (combined) | Higher cost of affordable second-hand vehicles |
| Used cars (10–20 years old) | 30% | 40% | — | Higher cost; most used-car buyers are lower-income |
| Used cars (over 20 years) | Varies | 50% | — | Near-prohibitive for oldest vehicles |
| Cosmetics & beauty products (HS 33.03–33.07) — imported | 10% | 15% | +1.91 | Urban consumers, especially women; raises cost of personal care |
| Plastic / rubber clogs (imported) | 0% | 10% | +10.58 | Low-income consumers who rely on affordable footwear |
| Small cars (engine ≤ 1,000cc, HS 8703.21.90) | 0% | 5% | +5.71 | Entry-level vehicles now taxed; affects first-time car buyers |
| Sports betting & gambling (land + online) | 0% | 5% of stake | +74.50 | Reduces gambling attractiveness — positive social effect; raises cost of entertainment for bettors |
| Nail UV/LED dryers (HS 8516.79.00) | 0% | 10% | +0.57 | Beauty salons; limited consumer impact |
| Artificial flowers & decorations (HS 67.02) — imported | 0% | 20% | +0.85 | Event industry, households; environmental rationale |
| Fuel excise duty — NO change | — | Unchanged | 0 | Positive: fuel already up 44–49% since March 2026; relief maintained |
| Law / Area | Measure | Revenue (TZS Bn) | Citizen Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Local Government Finance Act — Sura 290 | LGA allocation for youth/women loans raised from 10% to 15% of own revenue; 5% for market investment | — | Positive: more credit access for youth, women, and PWDs |
| Land Act — Sura 113 | Land rent revenue redistributed: 10% to MoL, 10% to LGAs | — | Could improve land administration at local level |
| Central Bank Act — Sura 197 | Government overdraft cap reduced from 18% to 14% of prior year domestic revenue | — | Fiscal discipline signal; reduces monetary financing risk |
| Stamp Duty Act — Sura 189 | Cheque stamp duty: TZS 100 → TZS 500; various document duties raised | +11.08 | Higher cost of formal financial transactions |
| Special Economic Zones Act 2024 | Road tractors/semi-trailers added to negative list (exemption removed) | +57.16 | Higher cost for logistics companies; may pass to transport costs |
| Mining Sector | 10% of mining sector revenue retained for a new mineral research fund | — | Long-term positive for sector development |
| Planning Commission Act | All national development projects must pass technical, financial, environmental assessment before budget inclusion | — | Strongly positive: reduces white-elephant project risk |
Tanzania's participation in the EAC Pre-Budget Consultations (Arusha, 15 May 2026) produced a series of tariff adjustments that balance domestic industry protection against the interests of ordinary consumers.
| Product | Old Duty | New Duty | Direction | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electric vehicles (HS 8702–8704) | 25% | 10% | Reduced | Positive for EV adoption; lower cost for green transport |
| Used clothing (mitumba) | 35% or $0.40/kg | 35% only (flat rate) | Relief | Positive: removes per-kg penalty; lowers cost of affordable clothing |
| Vitenge/printed fabric | 50% | 35% | Reduced | Positive: lowers cost of traditional clothing for households |
| Crude palm oil (CPO) | 0% | 10% | Increased | Higher cost of imported cooking oil inputs; protects local oilseed farmers |
| Decorative/building stones (HS 68.02) | 25% | 35% or $2/sqm | Increased | Protects local stone quarries; raises construction costs |
| Aluminium bars & profiles (HS 76.04) | 25% | 25% or $550/tonne | Increased | Protects local aluminium processors; raises construction material costs |
| Mineral/aerated water (HS 2201.10.00) | 35% | 60% | Increased | Strong industry protection; may raise bottled water prices |
| Baby diapers (HS 9619.00.90) | 10% | 35% | Increased | Significant: much higher cost for a basic child welfare product |
| Soap (HS 3402.49/50/90) | 25% | 35% or $350/tonne | Increased | Protects local manufacturers; may raise household soap prices |
| Cotton grey fabric | 25% | 35% or $0.30/metre | Increased | Supports domestic textile industry |
| Table salt (HS 2501.00.90) | 35% | 50% | Increased | Protects local salt producers; higher cost for basic food staple |
| Sugar (emergency imports via TBS permit) | 100% or $460/tonne | 35% | Reduced | Positive: allows lower-cost emergency sugar imports to bridge domestic shortfall |
| Smart cards for NIDA | 25% | 0% | Exempt | Positive: facilitates cheaper national ID cards for all citizens |
| EFD/POS machines | 10% | 0% | Exempt | Supports small business tax compliance infrastructure |
| Motorcycle tyres (new) | 10% | 25% | Increased | Compounded with 5% excise on motorcycles — bodaboda operators face double hit |
Not all Tanzanians are equally affected. Here is how the 2026/27 tax package maps against different segments of the population.
New 5% excise on motorcycle purchases, higher import duties on tyres (10% → 25%), and fuel already up 44–49%. Three compounding pressures on operating costs. Little to no offsetting relief.
Net HurtNew 1% advance tax on crop buyers and 1% WHT on livestock/milk/fish sales risks lowering the farm-gate prices buyers are willing to pay. On thin margins, even a 1% cut can eliminate profit. Some relief: fertiliser subsidy maintained.
Net HurtPresumptive tax rate raised from 3.5% to 4.5% — a 28.6% rate hike. However, new businesses get a 1-year holiday and the threshold doubles to TZS 200M. Net effect depends on whether the trader is established or new.
MixedHigher prices for: basic soap, bottled water, motorcycles, affordable shoes (clogs), used cars, cosmetics. Baby diaper costs to rise substantially. Some offset: cooking oil VAT exemption maintained; sugar emergency imports allowed.
Net HurtPositive: VAT deferment for capital goods extended indefinitely. Reduced retained earnings WHT (30% → 15%). EV tariff cut. Negative: customs processing fee up 67%, raising input costs.
MixedUsed cars (10–20 years old) face a 33% rate hike in excise duty (30% → 40%). Most Tanzanian car buyers can only afford older vehicles. This directly raises the cost of the most accessible form of private transport.
Net HurtElectric vehicles: customs duty halved (25% → 10%). EV charging stations: VAT-exempt. LPG smart meters: VAT-exempt. The government sends consistent green signals — but the EV benefit primarily serves higher-income buyers for now.
Net HelpedBaby diapers face a 250% tariff hike (10% → 35%). With limited domestic production, this directly increases the cost of child hygiene. In a country with a TFR of ~4.8, this affects millions of households.
Net HurtDigital services WHT rises to 3%. However, digital platforms for payment now gain additional incentives (extra credit access points for digital payment users). Formalisation push is strong — bodabodas and street vendors pushed toward digital payments.
MixedBeyond the mechanics of rate changes lies a fundamental policy question about the government's theory of economic development and its role in it.
Tanzania's tax-to-GDP ratio stands at approximately 13.2% in 2025/26, rising to a targeted 13.7% in 2026/27. This remains one of the lowest ratios in Sub-Saharan Africa — where peers like Rwanda exceed 15%, Kenya approaches 16%, and the EAC average stands around 14.5%.
The structural challenge is not a lack of tax rates — Tanzania has rates comparable to regional peers — but rather a narrow tax base. An estimated 70% or more of economic activity in Tanzania remains outside the formal tax net. The TRA is therefore intensifying collection from the same pool of registered businesses, while the informal economy continues to operate largely untaxed.
This creates a vicious cycle: higher rates on formal businesses push the marginal entrepreneur toward informality; the formal tax base shrinks; rates must rise again to maintain revenue targets. The 3.5% → 4.5% presumptive tax increase for small traders is a textbook example of this dynamic.
Tanzania's 2026/27 budget introduces no major measure to address the core structural barriers to private investment: the cost and access of credit (average commercial lending rates of 16–18%); contract enforcement delays (average commercial dispute takes 3–5 years); the multiplicity of regulatory agencies and levies (noted directly in the budget speech as an ongoing challenge); and land title insecurity.
The government has reduced retained earnings WHT (a positive step) and extended VAT deferment for capital goods (excellent). But these are tactical adjustments, not systemic shifts. The Presidential Commission on Tax System Reforms (Tume ya Rais ya Maboresho ya Mfumo wa Kodi) reportedly submitted 284 recommendations — the budget addresses only a handful.
The 2026/27 budget allocates TZS 2.33 trillion to capital investment in physical assets — down 16.2% from the previous year. Yet the budget speech emphasises strategic investment in infrastructure: the SGR railway extension (Dodoma–Mwanza, Isaka–Kigoma), TAZARA rehabilitation, the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and energy investments. These are financed primarily through borrowing.
Tanzania continues to borrow to invest, while its private sector — which should be the engine of asset formation — struggles to access affordable capital. This reflects a government that still sees itself as the primary delivery mechanism for developmental investment, rather than as a facilitator of private investment at scale.
The budget references PPP frameworks and private sector participation — but the 2026/27 budget does not include a single major announced PPP transaction in infrastructure, despite the rhetoric about private-sector-led growth.
With interest payments at TZS 6.86 trillion (13.1% of total expenditure), and a new borrowing programme of TZS 15.54 trillion planned for 2026/27, the debt service burden will grow in future years. Tanzania's overall debt remains technically sustainable at 39.6% of GDP against a 55% ceiling — but the trajectory bears watching, especially as concessional loan terms tighten and commercial borrowing (TZS 2.43 trillion planned) becomes a larger share of the mix.
"The budget speech calls for a private-sector-led economy — but the fiscal architecture of 2026/27 shows a government that still believes the most reliable path to development finance is extracting more from the taxpayers it already knows. Until Tanzania broadens its formal economy and reduces the cost of doing business, it will keep tightening the same screw." — TICGL Economic Research Commentary, June 2026
A comprehensive fiscal accounting of every tax measure in the Finance Bill 2026, ranked by revenue contribution.
| Rank | Measure | Governing Law | Revenue Direction | Amount (TZS Billion) | Effect on Citizens |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Annual 8% specific excise duty adjustment (beer, spirits, tobacco, soft drinks) | Excise Duty Act | Revenue Up | 251.54 | Higher prices on beverages and tobacco |
| 2 | Customs Processing Fee 0.6% → 1.0% | TRA Act | Revenue Up | 203.23 | Higher import costs across all goods |
| 3 | Presumptive regime threshold doubled; rate raised to 4.5% | Income Tax Act | Revenue Up | 111.13 + 75.11 | Higher tax on small businesses |
| 4 | Advance single instalment tax 1% on crop buyers | Income Tax Act | Revenue Up | 99.87 | Risk of lower farm-gate prices |
| 5 | Used car excise duty increases (8–10yr: 15→20%; 10–20yr: 30→40%; 20+yr: 50%) | Excise Duty Act | Revenue Up | 106.70 | Higher cost of affordable used vehicles |
| 6 | Sports betting excise: 5% on stake value | Excise Duty Act | Revenue Up | 74.50 | Reduces gambling; social benefit |
| 7 | Semi-trailers/road tractors removed from SEZ negative list exemption | SEZ Act 2024 | Revenue Up | 57.16 | Higher logistics cost |
| 8 | WHT 1% on live animals, raw milk, fish purchases | Income Tax Act | Revenue Up | 49.49 | Risk of price squeeze on pastoralists/fishers |
| 9 | Motorcycle excise: 5% (excluding EV/CNG/ambulance) | Excise Duty Act | Revenue Up | 30.40 | Higher bodaboda purchase cost |
| 10 | Excise: cosmetics 10→15% | Excise Duty Act | Revenue Up | 1.91 | Higher personal care costs |
| 11 | Excise: plastic clogs 0→10% | Excise Duty Act | Revenue Up | 10.58 | Higher cost of affordable footwear |
| 12 | Excise: cars ≤1000cc 0→5% | Excise Duty Act | Revenue Up | 5.71 | Higher entry-level car cost |
| 13 | Stamp duty increases (cheques, documents) | Stamp Duty Act | Revenue Up | 11.08 | Higher cost of formal transactions |
| 14 | Excise: digital services (foreign non-resident) | Excise Duty Act | Revenue Up | 1.63 | Higher cost of online services |
| 15 | Digital services WHT 2→3% (foreign providers) | Income Tax Act | Revenue Up | 1.44 | Marginal cost increase on digital subscriptions |
| 16 | Football/sports royalties WHT 5→10% | Income Tax Act | Revenue Up | 1.44 | Limited direct impact |
| 17 | Forest products (varnish, latex, resin) 2% income tax | Income Tax Act | Revenue Up | 0.43 | Extends formality in forest economy |
| 18 | EV charging equipment VAT exempt | VAT Act | Revenue Down | −5.97 | Supports green transition |
| 19 | Aircraft engines/tyres VAT exempt | VAT Act | Revenue Down | −14.84 | Lower aviation costs |
| 20 | Retained earnings WHT: 30→15% | Income Tax Act | Revenue Down | −23.59 | Positive for business reinvestment |
| NET ESTIMATED NEW REVENUE (selected measures) | ~TZS 1,020 Bn | ||||
The 2026/27 budget is crafted against a backdrop of solid growth but rising external pressures — notably the US-Iran-Israel conflict pushing fuel and fertiliser prices sharply higher.
| Indicator | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | 2026 (Target) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Real GDP Growth (%) | 5.1 | 5.5 | 5.9 | 6.3 | On Track |
| Headline Inflation (%) | 4.9 | 3.8 | 3.4 | 3.0–5.0 | Within Target |
| Tax Revenue / GDP (%) | 12.1 | 12.8 | 13.2 | 13.7 | Improving |
| Domestic Revenue / GDP (%) | 14.9 | 15.7 | 16.5 | 17.1 | Improving |
| Public Debt / GDP (%) | 40.4 | 39.8 | ~39.6 | ~40% | Stable |
| Forex Reserves (months import cover) | 4.0 | 5.1 | 5.72 bn USD | ≥4 months | Adequate |
| Budget Deficit / GDP (%) | 3.5 | 3.2 | ~3.0 | 2.9 | Narrowing |
| GDP in TZS (Trillion) | 190.2 | 212.4 | 234.1 | ~260 | Growing |
| GDP in USD (Billion) | 76.3 | 84.1 | 91.8 | ~100 | Growing |
| Poverty Rate (below basic needs) % | — | — | 25.1 | — | Needs Acceleration |
Disclaimer: This analysis is produced by TICGL Economic Research based on the official Budget Speech (Hotuba ya Bajeti) presented by the Minister of Finance, H.E. Ambassador Khamis Mussa Omar, to the National Assembly of Tanzania on 11 June 2026. All figures are sourced directly from the official document. Interpretations, assessments and policy commentary represent the independent analytical position of TICGL and do not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. © 2026 Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd (TICGL). All rights reserved. | ticgl.com