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Presumptive Tax Hike: 3.5% to 4.5% — What It Means for Tanzania's Small Businesses | TICGL
TICGL Tax Policy Brief · June 2026

Presumptive Tax Up From 3.5% to 4.5%: A 28.6% Rate Hike for Small Businesses — Formalization Boost or Informality Trap?

Tanzania's FY2026/27 Budget raises the presumptive tax rate for small businesses while doubling the eligibility threshold to TZS 200 million. TICGL examines what this means for the country's hundreds of thousands of small traders — and whether it pushes more of them toward the informal economy.

📅 Effective: FY2026/27 👤 By: Amran Bhuzohera, Economist 📑 Source: Income Tax Act Amendments, Budget Speech 2026/27
3.5% → 4.5%
Presumptive Tax Rate
▲ +28.6% effective rate increase
TZS 100M → 200M
Eligibility Threshold
▲ Doubled coverage
TZS 75.11 Bn
Expected Revenue from Rate Hike
New FY2026/27 collection
TZS 111.13 Bn
Expected Revenue from Threshold Expansion
More businesses brought in
1 Year
Tax Holiday for New Small Businesses
▼ Relief for new entrants only
~70%
Of Tanzania's Economy Estimated Informal
Structural challenge

Understanding the Presumptive Tax Reform in Tanzania's FY2026/27 Budget

Two changes were made simultaneously to the presumptive tax regime — one that widens it, and one that makes it more expensive.

The presumptive tax system is Tanzania's simplified taxation regime for small businesses — designed to reduce the compliance burden for traders who would otherwise struggle with full income tax bookkeeping requirements. Instead of calculating taxable profit, eligible businesses pay a fixed percentage of their annual turnover.

In the FY2026/27 Budget, the government made two changes to this regime:

1. The Rate Increase

The presumptive tax rate for businesses with turnover between TZS 11 million and TZS 200 million has risen from 3.5% to 4.5% of turnover. In percentage-point terms this looks modest — just one point. But measured as a change in the effective tax burden, it represents a 28.6% increase in what these businesses must pay.

2. The Threshold Expansion

The turnover ceiling for eligibility under the presumptive regime has been raised from TZS 100 million to TZS 200 million — aligning it with the VAT registration threshold. This brings a new tier of medium-small businesses, previously required to file under the full income tax system, into the simplified presumptive regime.

Together, these two measures are projected to generate TZS 186.24 billion in combined additional revenue — TZS 75.11 billion from the rate increase and TZS 111.13 billion from the threshold expansion.

Presumptive Tax Rate: Before vs After
Effective tax burden on eligible turnover

What a 28.6% Rate Increase Means in Shillings

Percentage-point changes can understate real impact. Here is what the new rate means for businesses at different turnover levels.

Annual Turnover (TZS)Old Tax (3.5%)New Tax (4.5%)Additional Annual Cost (TZS)Increase
15,000,000525,000675,000150,000+28.6%
30,000,0001,050,0001,350,000300,000+28.6%
50,000,0001,750,0002,250,000500,000+28.6%
100,000,0003,500,0004,500,0001,000,000+28.6%
150,000,000 (newly eligible)N/A — was full income tax6,750,000New Tier
200,000,000 (new ceiling)N/A — was full income tax9,000,000New Tier
⚠ Why This Matters for Margins, Not Just Revenue Small businesses in retail, food vending, transport, and basic services typically operate on net margins of 5–15%. A business turning over TZS 50 million annually with a 10% net margin earns roughly TZS 5 million in profit. An additional TZS 500,000 in presumptive tax represents 10% of that entire profit — not 1 percentage point. For businesses operating closer to break-even, the increase can consume a much larger share of what little surplus remains.
Annual Tax Payable by Turnover Level (TZS)
Old rate (3.5%) vs new rate (4.5%)
Revenue Impact of the Two Reforms (TZS Billion)
Government's projected additional collection FY2026/27

Does a Higher Tax Burden Push Small Businesses Toward Informality?

This is the question that should sit at the heart of any assessment of this reform — and it cuts both ways.

The Case That It Could Worsen Informality

Tanzania's informal sector is already estimated to account for roughly 70% of total economic activity — one of the highest shares in East Africa. For a trader operating near the margin, the calculation is simple: registering formally now costs more, while operating informally costs nothing in direct tax.

When the cost of formality rises faster than the visible benefits of formality — access to credit, government tenders, legal protection, market access — some businesses will respond not by paying more, but by under-declaring turnover, deregistering, or never registering at all. This is a well-documented response pattern across developing economies when presumptive rates rise without a parallel increase in the perceived value of formalization.

For a business operating in an already fragile economic environment — rising fuel costs, currency pressure, slow consumer demand — a 28.6% increase in a fixed cost (tax owed regardless of actual profit) adds to a growing list of reasons to stay invisible to the tax authority.

The Case That the Threshold Expansion Helps

The doubling of the threshold to TZS 200 million is, in isolation, a positive step. It moves a tier of medium-small businesses out of the complex full income tax system — with its detailed bookkeeping, audit exposure, and compliance costs — and into a simpler, more predictable regime. For businesses in the TZS 100–200 million range, presumptive taxation at 4.5% may still be cheaper and simpler than full income tax compliance, even at the higher rate.

Additionally, the one-year tax holiday for new businesses entering the presumptive regime is a genuine incentive for first-time formalization — though it does nothing for businesses already operating formally and now facing a higher bill.

Why the Net Effect Is Genuinely Uncertain

The honest answer is that this reform pulls in two directions simultaneously:

  • For newly-eligible businesses (TZS 100–200M turnover): the move into presumptive taxation is likely a net relief compared to full income tax, even at 4.5%.
  • For existing presumptive taxpayers (TZS 11–100M turnover): the rate increase is a straightforward cost increase with no offsetting benefit — these businesses gain nothing new, they simply pay more.
  • For unregistered or borderline informal operators: the higher rate raises the perceived cost of entering the formal system at precisely the moment the government wants to attract them in.

This is the structural tension TICGL highlighted in its broader budget analysis: Tanzania's tax-to-GDP ratio remains low not primarily because rates are too low, but because the formal tax base is too narrow. Raising rates on those already inside the net does not address that narrowness — and risks making it worse if it discourages new entrants or pushes marginal existing taxpayers out.

What Would Make This Reform Work

The threshold expansion is the right instrument. The rate increase, applied uniformly, may undercut it. A more calibrated approach — for example, a lower rate for newly-registering businesses during a transition period, alongside visible improvements in what formal registration delivers (faster TIN processing, access to digital lending products tied to tax compliance history, simplified renewal procedures) — would align incentives rather than work against them.

⚠ TICGL Warning: The Formalization Paradox A tax system can simultaneously have the right design and the wrong timing. Expanding the presumptive threshold to TZS 200 million is a structurally sound move that should encourage formalization. But raising the rate on the same regime, in the same budget, sends a mixed signal to exactly the population the policy is trying to attract: "come into the formal system — but it now costs more than it did yesterday." For an economy where roughly 7 in 10 economic actors already operate outside the tax net, the risk is that this reform reinforces the rational choice to remain informal — not because formalization is undesirable, but because the immediate cost of formality has just gone up while its tangible benefits remain, for many small operators, distant or unclear.

Small Business Profiles: How the Reform Plays Out in Practice

The presumptive tax regime covers a wide range of small enterprises. Here is how different segments are likely affected.

🏪

Small Retail Shop (Duka)

Turnover TZS 30–60 million. Already formally registered. The rate increase is a direct cost increase with no new benefit — a straightforward squeeze on already-thin retail margins.

Net Cost Increase
🍲

Food Vendor / Mama Lishe

Often operates near the TZS 11M lower threshold, frequently informally. The higher rate makes formal registration less attractive at exactly the point the government wants more inclusion.

Informality Incentive Strengthens
🚗

Transport Operator (Taxi/Bajaji Fleet)

Turnover often TZS 80–150 million. Some newly fall under presumptive at the higher threshold — may benefit from simplicity versus full income tax, even at 4.5%.

Mixed — Depends on Prior Regime
💇

Salon, Barbershop, Service Provider

Typically TZS 15–40 million turnover. Largely cash-based and difficult to audit. Higher presumptive rate increases incentive to under-report actual takings.

Compliance Risk Rises
📦

Wholesale / Distribution Trader

Turnover TZS 120–200 million — newly eligible for presumptive regime. Moving from full income tax to 4.5% presumptive is likely a net simplification benefit, even with the higher rate.

Likely Net Benefit
🆕

New Business (Year 1)

Benefits from the one-year income tax holiday — a genuine incentive to register formally from day one, regardless of the new rate that applies from year two onward.

Positive Incentive

The Reform at a Glance

A consolidated view of the rate change, threshold expansion, and Tanzania's broader formalization challenge.

Presumptive Tax Rate Timeline
Historical and projected rate (%)
Tanzania Economy: Formal vs Informal
Estimated share of economic activity
Eligible Businesses by Turnover Band
Illustrative distribution under new TZS 200M threshold

A Tax Reform That Could Go Either Way

The presumptive tax changes in the FY2026/27 budget capture, in miniature, the broader tension running through Tanzania's entire tax strategy this year: a genuinely useful structural reform (the threshold expansion) bundled with a rate increase that risks undermining its own objective.

If the threshold expansion succeeds in drawing TZS 100–200 million businesses out of full income tax and into a simpler regime, and if the rate increase does not meaningfully deter new registrations or trigger exits from the formal system, then this reform will have modestly broadened the tax base while raising revenue — a reasonable outcome.

But if the rate increase causes existing presumptive taxpayers to under-declare turnover, or causes borderline informal operators to stay unregistered, the reform could narrow the effective tax base even as the headline rate rises — generating less revenue growth than projected while adding friction to the formalization agenda the government says it wants to advance.

"You cannot tax your way into a larger formal economy. You can only make formality attractive enough that informality becomes the costlier choice. Raising the price of the door at the same time you widen it sends a confusing signal to the people you most need to walk through." — TICGL Economic Research Commentary, June 2026

What TICGL Recommends Monitoring

  • TRA registration trends for businesses in the TZS 11–50 million range over the next two quarters — any decline would signal a deterrence effect.
  • Actual revenue collected from the threshold expansion versus the projected TZS 111.13 billion — a shortfall would suggest under-declaration by newly-eligible businesses.
  • Uptake of the one-year tax holiday by genuinely new registrations versus existing businesses re-registering under new names.
  • Whether complementary measures — access to credit, digital payment incentives, simplified renewal — are introduced to make formal status more valuable, not just less avoidable.

Disclaimer: This analysis is produced by TICGL Economic Research based on the FY2026/27 Budget Speech and Income Tax Act amendments presented to the National Assembly of Tanzania on 11 June 2026. All figures are sourced from the official budget documents. Interpretations, assessments, and policy commentary represent the independent analytical position of TICGL and do not constitute tax, legal, or investment advice. © 2026 Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd (TICGL). All rights reserved. | ticgl.com

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