✅ Updated with Finance Act 2025 & Latest 2025/2026 Economic Data
01

Executive Summary

This comprehensive study examines the impact of tax laws on investments and investors in Tanzania, analyzing challenges posed by the country's tax system and suggesting evidence-based solutions. Tanzania's tax structure, characterized by a high corporate tax rate of 30%, frequent policy changes, complex compliance procedures, and persistent delays in VAT refunds, continues to significantly hinder both local and foreign investments despite recent reforms.

🎯 Critical Research Findings 2025

67% of surveyed investors reported that policy instability remains a key barrier to investment decisions. Tanzania's corporate tax rate of 30% is among the highest in East Africa, surpassing Kenya (25%), Rwanda (28%), and Ethiopia (25%). The Finance Act 2025, effective July 1, 2025, introduces significant new measures including a controversial 10% withholding tax on undistributed profits after 12 months, potentially discouraging business expansion and reinvestment.

However, positive developments emerged in 2024-2025. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) reached $1.7 billion in 2024, marking a 28% increase from 2023 and the highest level since 2014 according to UNCTAD's World Investment Report 2025. The Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC) registered 842 projects worth $7.7 billion in 2024, the highest investment value since 1991, with manufacturing and transport sectors leading.

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FDI Growth 2024

$1.7 Billion

28% increase from 2023 ($1.34B), highest since 2014. FDI stock rose to $21-22 billion. Tanzania ranks 11th in Africa for FDI inflows.

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TIC Registered Projects 2024

842 projects

Worth $7.7 billion - highest investment value since 1991. Manufacturing led with 377 projects ($3.1B), transport 138 projects ($1.2B).

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Economic Growth Q3 2025

6.4% GDP

Strong momentum driven by agriculture, mining, construction, and financial services. Inflation stable at 3.6% within 3-5% target.

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Job Creation

523,000+ jobs

Created by 2,020 projects registered between March 2021-February 2025 under President Samia (177% increase).

These tax-related challenges continue to affect business profitability and undermine investor confidence, particularly in manufacturing, agriculture, and tourism sectors. Through surveys and interviews with 150 local and foreign investors, plus analysis of policymaker perspectives, this study identifies specific tax law issues including multiple taxation, inefficient VAT refund processes, and the new Finance Act 2025 provisions.

Disclaimer: This report reflects data and trends up to early 2026. The Finance Act 2025 (effective July 1, 2025) and ongoing policy reforms may further impact the investment climate. Tanzania targets attracting $15 billion in annual FDI by 2026, requiring significant policy improvements.

02

Introduction

Taxation is a critical determinant of a country's investment climate and economic competitiveness. In Tanzania, tax policies significantly influence both domestic and foreign direct investment (FDI), with far-reaching implications for economic growth, job creation, and industrial development. While taxation is essential for government revenue and public service provision, an overly complex, unpredictable, or burdensome tax regime can discourage investors, limit capital inflows, and impede economic transformation.

This comprehensive study examines how Tanzania's tax laws create both challenges and opportunities for investments and investors. The analysis covers corporate tax rates, compliance burdens, multiple taxation issues, VAT administration challenges, and the implications of recent reforms introduced through the Finance Act 2025. The research is particularly timely given Tanzania's ambitious target to attract $15 billion in annual FDI by 2026 and President Samia Suluhu Hassan's commitment to improving the business environment.

Research Objectives

  • Analyze the impact of Tanzania's tax laws on investment decisions, business profitability, and investor confidence
  • Evaluate the Finance Act 2025 reforms and their implications for the investment climate
  • Compare Tanzania's tax system with regional competitors (Kenya, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Uganda) to assess competitiveness
  • Identify specific tax-related barriers that discourage both local and foreign investment across key sectors
  • Examine the relationship between tax policy changes and FDI trends from 2020-2025
  • Assess the effectiveness of tax incentives and special economic zone (SEZ) policies
  • Provide evidence-based policy recommendations to enhance Tanzania's investment attractiveness while maintaining fiscal sustainability

💡 Research Methodology

This study employs a mixed-methods approach combining: (1) Quantitative surveys with 150 investors (75 local, 75 foreign) across manufacturing, agriculture, tourism, technology, and mining sectors; (2) In-depth interviews with 25 investors and policymakers; (3) Secondary data analysis from TIC, TRA, World Bank, IMF, UNCTAD, and Bank of Tanzania reports; (4) Statistical analysis using SPSS and Excel to examine correlations between tax variables and investment outcomes.

03

Background of Investments in Tanzania

Tanzania has positioned itself as a key investment destination in East Africa, leveraging its vast natural resources, strategic geographical location, political stability, and membership in regional economic blocs including the East African Community (EAC) and the Southern African Development Community (SADC). The country attracts investments across diverse sectors: mining (particularly gold, graphite, nickel), agriculture (cashew, coffee, cotton), manufacturing, energy (natural gas, renewables), tourism, and increasingly, technology and services.

Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) Trends: 2020-2025

Tanzania FDI Inflows Trend (2020-2024) with 2025 Target

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2024 FDI Performance

$1.7B

28% increase from 2023 ($1.34B). Highest level since 2014 per UNCTAD World Investment Report 2025. Driven by infrastructure and services.

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2026 FDI Target

$15 Billion

Ambitious goal announced at UN General Assembly September 2025. Requires more than doubling current FDI levels and addressing tax challenges.

⛏️

Sector Distribution

40% Mining

Mining accounts for 40% of total FDI, manufacturing 25%, infrastructure 15%. Gold exports reached $4.7B in 2025 (up 37.4%).

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FDI Stock & Ranking

$21-22B

Total FDI stock rose from $20B (2023) to $21-22B (2024). Tanzania ranks 11th in Africa for FDI inflows.

YearFDI Inflows (USD)Growth RateKey Drivers
2020$685 million-COVID-19 impact, policy uncertainty
2021$922 million+34.6%Post-pandemic recovery, new administration
2022$1.1 billion+19.3%Mining expansion, infrastructure projects
2023$1.34 billion+21.8%Improved business climate, services growth
2024$1.7 billion+26.9%Record TIC registrations, infrastructure boom
2026 Target$15 billion+782%Requires major policy reforms, tax improvements

Sources: Bank of Tanzania, UNCTAD World Investment Report 2025, Tanzania Investment Centre

Key FDI Drivers & Developments 2024-2025

  • Infrastructure Investment: Major ongoing projects including Standard Gauge Railway (SGR), Julius Nyerere Hydropower Plant, port expansions (Dar es Salaam, Bagamoyo), and road networks
  • Services Sector Expansion: Rapid growth in telecommunications (5G rollout), banking and fintech, hospitality, and logistics services contributing significantly to FDI composition
  • Mining Diversification: Beyond traditional gold mining, increased focus on graphite (Mahenge project), nickel-cobalt (Kabanga), lithium deposits, and rare earth elements for global energy transition
  • Reinvested Earnings Dominance: Reinvested earnings and intercompany loans now constitute the largest components of FDI inflows, indicating investor confidence in long-term operations
  • Regional Investment Positioning: Tanzania ranks 11th in Africa for FDI inflows behind Egypt ($46.5B), Ethiopia ($3.9B), Côte d'Ivoire ($3.8B), but ahead of Rwanda ($1.4B)
  • China Investment Platform: TIC established investment facilitation platform in Hunan Province, China to secure $3 billion in Chinese investments following President Xi's $10B Africa pledge
  • U.S. Investment Push: Vice President Mpango pitched U.S. investors at UN General Assembly; bilateral trade tripled to $770M (2024) from $228M (2020)
  • Stock Market Growth: Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange market cap rose 18.35% to $7.42B (March 2025) from $6.28B (March 2024)

Domestic Investment & SME Contribution

Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) contribute approximately 35% of Tanzania's GDP but continue to struggle with excessive taxation and compliance burdens. The private sector, largely supported by both domestic and foreign investment activities, provides over 80% of employment opportunities in the country, making investment-friendly policies critical for inclusive growth.

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Employment Impact

Between March 2021-February 2025, 2,020 projects worth $23.67 billion created over 523,000 jobs under President Samia (177% increase in project registrations).

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SME Challenges

Despite contributing 35% of GDP, SMEs face over 10 different taxes and levies, increasing operational costs by up to 18% annually for formal businesses.

💡 Economic Performance 2025

Tanzania's economy maintained strong momentum in 2025. Real GDP growth reached 6.4% in Q3 2025, up from 6.1% in Q3 2024, with mainland Tanzania growing 5.9% annually. Major contributors included agriculture, mining and quarrying, construction, and financial services. Inflation remained stable at 3.6% within the 3-5% target range. Gold exports surged 37.4% to $4.7 billion, while tourist arrivals reached 2.29 million. IMF projects 6.0% GDP growth for 2025 and 6.3% for 2026, supported by continued investment and reforms.

Importance of Investments in Economic Growth

Investment Contribution to Tanzania's Economy

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Job Creation

FDI projects created 100,000+ jobs between 2018-2022. The private sector, driven by investments, provides over 80% of total employment opportunities.

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GDP Growth Driver

Investment-led sectors (construction, manufacturing, services) contributed significantly to 6.4% GDP growth in Q3 2025, maintaining strong momentum.

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Export & Industrialization

FDI crucial for export-oriented industries. Exports of goods and services rose 10.2% to $17.6B in 2025, supporting current account improvement.

04

Overview of Tanzania's Tax System & Finance Act 2025 Reforms

Tanzania's tax system is comprehensive and multi-layered, encompassing various taxes administered primarily by the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA). Understanding this system and the recent Finance Act 2025 reforms is crucial for investors navigating the country's business environment. The Finance Act 2025, which took effect on July 1, 2025, introduces significant amendments aimed at accelerating economic growth but also presents new compliance challenges.

1. Corporate Income Tax (CIT) - Current Framework

Company Type/SectorTax RateStatusAdditional Notes
Resident Companies (Standard)30%CurrentOn taxable corporate profits
Non-Resident with PE30% + 15% WHTCurrent15% withholding tax on repatriated profits
Newly Listed Companies (DSE)25%Updated 20253 years if ≥25% public equity (reduced from 30%)
Vehicle/Tractor/Boat Assemblers10%IncentiveFirst 5 years for new assemblers
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers20%IncentiveFirst 5 years with government performance agreement
Leather Manufacturers20%IncentiveFirst 5 years with government performance agreement
EPZ/SEZ Domestic Sales30%New 2025Tax exemption removed for domestic market sales

Sources: Finance Act 2025, Tanzania Revenue Authority, Income Tax Act

⚠️ Regional Competitiveness Alert

Tanzania's standard corporate tax rate of 30% remains among the highest in East Africa and significantly higher than competitor nations: Kenya (25%), Rwanda (28% standard, 20% for priority sectors), Ethiopia (25%), and Ghana (25%). This tax differential makes Tanzania less attractive for new investments, particularly in cost-sensitive manufacturing and export-oriented sectors.

Corporate Tax Rate Comparison - East Africa 2025

2. Finance Act 2025: Critical New Tax Measures

New MeasureRate/DetailsEffective DateImpact Assessment
Undistributed Profits Tax10% WHT on 30% of profits undistributed after 12 monthsJuly 1, 2025⚠️ Major concern: May discourage reinvestment and business expansion. Exempts resident entities under CFC rules.
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)1% on turnover (increased from 0.5%)July 1, 2025⚠️ Affects loss-making entities, particularly startups and businesses with thin margins. Agricultural, health, education exempt.
Thin Capitalization UpdateRetained earnings now included in equity definitionJuly 1, 2025Positive: Improves debt-to-equity ratios, better for interest deductibility, benefits banking sector.
Forestry Products Tax2% single instalment tax (was 3.5%)January 1, 2026Sector-specific impact on timber, logs, poles sales. Final tax paid before transportation.
Hired Motor Vehicles WHT10% on rental paymentsJuly 1, 2025New withholding obligation affecting vehicle rental businesses and logistics companies.
CPA Certification RequirementMandatory for individuals (turnover >TZS 500M) & corporations (income >TZS 100M)July 1, 2025Increased compliance costs and administrative burden for medium and large businesses.
Electronic Tax System IntegrationMandatory taxpayer system interface with TRAJuly 1, 2025⚠️ Penalties include up to 3 years imprisonment or fines for non-compliance. Requires system upgrades.

Source: Finance Act 2025, EY Tanzania Analysis, PwC Tanzania Tax Summaries

⚡ Finance Act 2025: Key Investor Concerns

  • Undistributed Profits Tax (10%): Most controversial provision. Commissioner General can deem 30% of profits as distributed if no dividend declared within 12 months, subject to 10% WHT. This effectively discourages companies from retaining earnings for expansion, working capital, or strategic investments. Particularly harmful for growth-stage companies and capital-intensive sectors.
  • EPZ/SEZ Domestic Sales Restriction: Income from domestic market sales by EPZ/SEZ investors no longer exempt from income tax. This significantly reduces the attractiveness of these zones and may affect existing investors' business models and profitability projections.
  • Increased AMT Burden: Doubling AMT from 0.5% to 1% on turnover creates cash flow pressure for loss-making entities, particularly new businesses, cyclical industries, and those affected by external shocks.
  • Mandatory System Integration: Requirement to interface business systems with TRA's electronic platform creates IT infrastructure costs and raises data security and sovereignty concerns for multinational companies.

3. Value-Added Tax (VAT) - Current Framework & 2025 Changes

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Standard VAT Rate

18%

Applies to most goods and services. Higher than Kenya (16%), Ethiopia (15%). One of highest in East Africa, affecting competitiveness.

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Digital Payments VAT New

16%

Reduced rate for B2C goods paid electronically (effective September 1, 2025). Aims to promote digital economy and reduce cash transactions.

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VAT Refund Delays

12-24 months

TSh 1.4-1.5 trillion (~$650M) in pending refunds as of 2025. Severely affects cash flow. TRA proposes 30-day processing by 2026.

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VAT Withholding System New

3% goods, 6% services

Withholding agents (Ministry of Finance, government entities, designated persons) must withhold VAT at source.

VAT CategoryRateStatusProducts/Services
Standard Rate18%CurrentMost goods and services
Electronic Payments16%From Sept 1, 2025B2C goods paid via electronic means (mobile money, cards, bank transfers)
Zero-Rated0%VariousExports, locally produced fertilizers (3 years to June 2028), cotton garments (1 year to June 2026)
Exempt (New)0%2025Pesticides (specific HS codes), reinsurance, piped natural gas for CNG (3 years), edible oil from local seeds (1 year)

💰 VAT Refund Crisis: A Major Investment Barrier

As of 2025, approximately TSh 1.4-1.5 trillion (≈$650 million) in VAT refunds remain pending, causing severe cash flow problems for exporters and businesses with significant capital investments. A major exporter reported waiting 14 months for a VAT refund of TSh 3 billion ($1.3 million), directly affecting expansion plans. Survey data shows 70% of businesses indicate VAT refunds take 12-24 months to process, compared to the statutory 30-90 days. The TRA has proposed implementing a 30-day processing time target by 2026 and introducing real-time VAT refund tracking systems, but implementation remains uncertain.

4. Withholding Tax Framework

Income TypeRateStatusImpact Notes
Dividends10%CurrentAffects profit repatriation for foreign investors. Higher than Uganda (5%).
Interest Payments10%CurrentOn interest paid to residents and non-residents. Impacts financing costs.
Undistributed Profits (New)10%From July 1, 2025On deemed distribution (30% of profits after 12 months). Controversial new measure discouraging reinvestment.
Technical/Management Services (Extractive)10%Increased 2025Increased from 5%. Affects mining and oil/gas sectors.
Motor Vehicle Rental10%From July 1, 2025New withholding on vehicle rental payments by resident persons.
Service Payments (General)5-15%CurrentVaries by type of service and residence status of recipient.

5. Pay As You Earn (PAYE) & Employment Taxes

Progressive tax rates up to 30% on employee salaries, plus 4% Skills and Development Levy (SDL), significantly increasing labor costs for investors. In July 2025, the minimum wage for public officials was raised from TZS 370,000 to TZS 500,000, creating upward pressure on private sector wages.

6. Multiple Taxation Burden

🏢 Layered Tax System Creates Complexity

A 2023 TIC and World Bank survey found that over 60% of investors cite multiple taxation as a major constraint to investment expansion. A typical manufacturing firm in Tanzania faces over 10 different taxes and levies, increasing operational costs by up to 18% annually. A 2025 TICGL survey found 85% of large investors consider multiple taxation a major cost burden affecting competitiveness.

Typical taxes facing a single business entity include: Corporate Income Tax (30%), VAT (18%), Withholding Taxes (5-15%), Skills and Development Levy (4%), Local Government Service Levies, Business License Fees, Land Rent, Stamp Duty, Excise Duties (sector-specific), and Import Duties on inputs.