Tanzania Shilling Exchange Rate Trends

The stability of the Tanzania Shilling is most directly measured by its exchange rate against the US dollar (USD). In early 2026, the Shilling showed moderate, well-managed depreciation β€” reflecting balanced monetary policy by the Bank of Tanzania (BoT) amidst global commodity price pressures and domestic liquidity dynamics.

By March 2026, the average exchange rate hovered around TZS 2,554 per USD, fluctuating in the range of TZS 2,550–2,609. The annual depreciation rate of just 0.97% is a strong signal that Tanzania's foreign exchange management remains effective.

TZS/USD Exchange Rate β€” Jan 2025 to Mar 2026
Source: Bank of Tanzania | Monthly Average Exchange Rates

Detailed Exchange Rate Data

PeriodExchange Rate (TZS per USD)Monthly Change (%)Notes
Jan 20252,486.6β€”Baseline stability amid low inflation
Jun 20252,604.6+4.7%Peak depreciation due to seasonal imports
Sep 20252,442.8βˆ’6.2%Recovery from export gains (gold)
Dec 20252,447.5+0.2%End-year stability
Jan 20262,518.1+2.9%Slight rise linked to debt payments
Mar 2026 (Avg)2,554.7+1.4%Fluctuated TZS 2,550–2,609; moderate pressure
Key Insight: Despite seasonal peaks (Jun 2025: TZS 2,604.6/USD), the Shilling self-corrected to TZS 2,442.8 by September 2025 β€” underpinned by strong gold and agricultural export revenues. Reserves of USD 6.3 billion (~5 months import cover) provide a robust buffer against external shocks.

Tanzania National Debt Overview (January 2026)

At the end of January 2026, Tanzania's total national debt stood at approximately TZS 128.6 trillion (USD 51.1 billion) β€” a modest 0.1% increase from the previous month. The debt is split between external obligations and domestic borrowing, with external debt accounting for 70% of the total.

National Debt Composition
External vs. Domestic β€” Jan 2026
Debt Stock by Category
TZS Trillion β€” January 2026
Debt CategoryAmount (TZS)Amount (USD)Share of Total
External Debtβ‰ˆ TZS 90.0 trillionβ‰ˆ USD 35.8 billion70%
Domestic DebtTZS 38.6 trillionβ‰ˆ USD 15.3 billion30%
Total National Debtβ‰ˆ TZS 128.6 trillionUSD 51,079.8 million100%

Growth of Domestic Debt (2018–2026)

Domestic borrowing has grown substantially over the past eight years, driven by the government's need to finance infrastructure, energy, and budget deficits. From TZS 13,618.8 billion in 2018, domestic debt nearly tripled to TZS 38,599.6 billion by January 2026 β€” an increase of 183% over eight years.

The most rapid acceleration occurred between 2020 and 2023, coinciding with COVID-19 recovery spending and accelerated public infrastructure investment. In January 2026 alone, domestic debt grew by 1.9% month-on-month.

Government Domestic Debt Growth Trend (2018–2026)
TZS Billion | Source: Bank of Tanzania
Year / PeriodDomestic Debt (TZS Billion)Year-on-Year Growth (%)Total National Debt (TZS Trillion)
201813,618.8β€”β€”
202014,637.8+7.5%β€”
202221,256.1+45.2%β€”
202326,494.6+24.6%β€”
202431,002.6+17.0%β€”
202537,899.0+22.2%β€”
Jan 202638,599.6+1.9% (MoM)128.6
Notable: The jump from TZS 14,637.8B (2020) to TZS 21,256.1B (2022) β€” a 45.2% spike β€” reflects significant post-pandemic fiscal stimulus. Growth has since moderated, signalling improved fiscal discipline.

Composition of Domestic Debt by Instrument

The majority of Tanzania's domestic debt is raised through government securities β€” primarily long-term Treasury Bonds, which provide stable, cost-effective financing for development projects. As of January 2026, government bonds accounted for an overwhelming 80.4% of total domestic debt.

Domestic Debt by Instrument
Percentage Share β€” Jan 2026
Domestic Debt by Instrument
TZS Billion Values β€” Jan 2026
InstrumentAmount (TZS Billion)Share of TotalPurpose
Government Bonds31,015.180.4%Long-term development financing
Treasury Bills1,821.44.7%Short-term liquidity management
Non-securitised Debt5,627.314.6%Budget support obligations
Other Liabilities0.1~0%Miscellaneous
Total Domestic Debt38,599.6100%β€”
Why bonds dominate: Treasury Bonds provide long-dated, fixed-rate financing that matches the timeline of Tanzania's infrastructure projects (hydropower, transport, etc.) and reduce rollover risk compared to short-term Treasury Bills.

Major Holders of Government Domestic Debt

Tanzania's domestic debt market is anchored by institutional investors β€” particularly commercial banks and pension funds, which together hold more than 55% of all government domestic securities. This broad-based creditor structure reduces concentration risk and reflects strong confidence in Tanzanian government paper.

Domestic Debt Holders β€” Share by Creditor Type
As at January 2026 | Source: Bank of Tanzania
CreditorAmount (TZS Billion)ShareSignificance
Commercial Banks10,902.528.5%Largest single creditor group
Pension Funds10,389.527.1%Long-term domestic savings mobilised
Bank of Tanzania7,436.019.4%Monetary policy operations
Insurance Companies2,005.05.2%Asset-liability matching
Other Investors7,128.918.6%Retail & institutional diversification

External Debt Structure

Tanzania's external debt of ~TZS 90 trillion (β‰ˆ USD 35.8 billion) is predominantly owed to multilateral development institutions. Multilateral lenders β€” including the World Bank, African Development Bank, and IMF β€” account for 58.2% of external debt, offering concessional terms that reduce debt servicing pressure.

Commercial creditors hold 35.5% of external debt, signalling Tanzania's growing access to international capital markets β€” though this also introduces higher refinancing risk.

External Debt by Creditor Type
Percentage Share β€” Jan 2026
External Debt β€” TZS Trillion
Values by Creditor β€” Jan 2026
Creditor TypeAmount (TZS Trillion)ShareLoan Terms
Multilateral Institutions~TZS 52.0T58.2%Concessional (low interest, long maturity)
Commercial Creditors~TZS 31.7T35.5%Market rates β€” higher servicing cost
Bilateral Creditors~TZS 3.8T4.3%Government-to-government, mixed terms
Export Credit~TZS 1.8T2.0%Tied to specific trade financing
Risk Note: The 35.5% share of commercial creditors is a key risk factor. A global interest rate spike or credit rating downgrade could significantly increase Tanzania's external debt servicing costs, putting pressure on foreign exchange reserves.

The Debt–Currency Relationship

There are several transmission channels through which Tanzania's debt profile affects the stability of the Shilling. Understanding these linkages is critical for investors, policymakers, and business planners operating in Tanzania.

FactorEffect on the ShillingCurrent Status
Increase in external debtHigher demand for foreign currency to repay loans β†’ depreciation pressureMonitored
Debt servicing paymentsDraws down foreign exchange reserves β†’ potential weakening of TZSManaged
Domestic borrowing via securitiesAbsorbs domestic liquidity β†’ reduces inflationary pressure on TZSPositive
Strong export revenues (gold, agriculture)Generates USD inflows β†’ supports TZS appreciationPositive
USD 6.3B forex reserves (~5 months import cover)Provides buffer against external shocks β†’ stabilises TZSPositive
FDI inflows (USD 11B in 2025)Boosts FX supply β†’ reduces depreciation pressurePositive

The net result of these forces is that Tanzania's Shilling has remained relatively stable in early 2026 β€” annual depreciation of just 0.97% confirms that the positive factors (strong exports, adequate reserves, FDI inflows) are outweighing the debt-related pressures.

Key Stability Indicators at a Glance β€” January 2026
Composite view of Tanzania's monetary and fiscal health metrics

Economic Implications for Growth & Development

Tanzania's monetary and fiscal conditions in early 2026 present a mixed but broadly optimistic picture for economic development. Low inflation (3.2%), a stable exchange rate, and targeted public investment are driving a projected 6.0–6.3% GDP growth for 2026 β€” among the highest in Sub-Saharan Africa.

However, risks persist: rising external debt (70% of total) heightens foreign exchange vulnerability β€” a 10% TZS depreciation could raise debt servicing costs by approximately TZS 9 trillion, crowding out social spending and potentially increasing poverty rates.

Implication CategoryPositive Impact on GrowthPotential RisksLink to Securities Market
Currency StabilityStable TZS (0.97% depreciation) aids exports (gold, agriculture up 10%), boosting 6.2% growthExternal debt servicing demands USD, risking 2–5% further depreciation if reserves dip
Debt SustainabilityDebt-to-GDP ~40.6%, funds infrastructure (TZS 15.24 trillion planned 2026/27), driving 160,000 jobs created in 2025Rising to 50% by 2027 could deter FDI if "debt overhang" reduces investor confidence
Macroeconomic ResilienceLow inflation (3.2%) and CBR (5.75%) support credit growth (20.3% in 2025), aiding SMEs and diversificationGlobal shocks (e.g., oil prices) could amplify debt pressures, slowing IMF-projected 6.3% growth
Inclusive DevelopmentFunds Vision 2050 (industrialisation, poverty cut), with agriculture/mining driving 6–7% Q1 growthHigh debt diverts from social services, risking unemployment (13.4%) and inequality
Tanzania GDP Growth & Debt-to-GDP Outlook (2022–2027)
GDP Growth Rate (%) vs Debt-to-GDP Ratio (%) | Projections post-2025

Conclusion & Outlook

βœ… TICGL Summary Verdict

Data from the Bank of Tanzania's March 2026 report confirms that Tanzania's national debt continues to increase β€” particularly through external borrowing. Despite this growth, the Tanzania Shilling remains relatively stable, with only moderate depreciation of 0.97% annually.

  • Tanzania's foreign exchange management is relatively effective, supported by USD 6.3 billion in reserves
  • External borrowing remains within manageable levels β€” debt-to-GDP of ~40.6% sits well below the 55% IMF threshold
  • Controlled inflation (3.2%), active monetary policy (CBR at 5.75%), and adequate FX market liquidity all contribute to Shilling stability
  • The government securities market is a key stabilising mechanism β€” mobilising domestic savings (80% through bonds) reduces external vulnerability
  • GDP growth of 6.0–6.3% projected for 2026, driven by mining, construction, agriculture, and ongoing economic reforms
  • With prudent revenue mobilisation, medium-term GDP growth of 6.5–6.9% is achievable

Overall, Tanzania's balanced debt management via the government securities market has kept Shilling pressures low, positioning the country for resilient and sustained economic growth. Analysts note a moderate external debt distress risk, but ongoing reforms and strong export performance provide meaningful buffers.

Investors and business operators in Tanzania should monitor Bank of Tanzania monthly reports, foreign exchange reserve levels, and auction participation rates as leading indicators of Shilling stability and fiscal health.