Tanzania's FY2026/27 Budget introduces a 5% excise duty on betting stakes across sports betting, casinos, slot machines and virtual games — projected to raise TZS 74.5 billion. TICGL examines what this tax means for an industry that has quietly become Tanzania's largest informal "employer" of young people, and the deeper economic and social questions it raises.
For the first time, Tanzania introduces a tax charged directly on the value of money staked — not just on operator revenue.
In presenting the FY2026/27 revenue measures, the Minister of Finance announced a new 5% excise duty on the value of betting stakes placed through land-based and online sports betting, land-based and online casinos, slot machines, and virtual games.
This is structurally different from the existing Gaming Tax regime, which has historically been levied on Gross Gaming Revenue (GGR) — the difference between stakes received and winnings paid out. The new excise duty applies to the stake itself, meaning every bet placed, win or lose, now carries an additional 5% charge at the point of placement.
The government has stated that the measure is intended to reduce the negative effects associated with gambling — including addiction and declining youth participation in productive economic activity — while also generating revenue. Notably, 10% of the new collection will be allocated to the Gaming Board of Tanzania (GBT) specifically to strengthen regulation and supervision of the industry.
The Budget Speech projects this measure will raise approximately TZS 74.5 billion in additional annual revenue — making it one of the more significant new excise measures in the FY2026/27 tax package, behind only the annual specific excise adjustment, the customs processing fee increase, and the presumptive tax reform.
Before assessing the impact of a new tax, it is essential to understand just how large — and how embedded — the betting industry has become in Tanzanian society.
| Indicator | Figure | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Total regular bettors | ~39.5 million (≈56% of adults) | More than half the adult population participates |
| Active football bettors | ~23.7M – 24.9M | 60–63% of all bettors — football dominates |
| Bettors aged 18–35 | ~74% of total | An overwhelmingly youth-driven market |
| Male share of bettors | ~72% | Strongly skewed toward young men |
| Urban concentration | ~70% | Dar es Salaam, Mwanza, Arusha lead activity |
| Low-income bettors (under TZS 300,000/month) | Majority of urban bettors | Betting is concentrated among economically vulnerable groups |
| Mobile/app-based betting | 91–94% of bettors | Digital infrastructure makes betting frictionless |
| Market GGR (2025) | USD 72.41 million | Baseline for growth projections |
| Market GGR projected (2030) | USD 623 million | Roughly an 8.6x increase over five years |
| Gaming tax revenue (2024/25) | ~TZS 261 billion | Up from TZS 33.6 billion in 2016/17 |
| Estimated sector contribution to GDP | ~0.5% | A measurable, growing share of the formal economy |
| Estimated formal jobs supported | ~30,000 | Agents, shops, platform staff, marketing |
At TZS 74.5 billion, the betting excise is a meaningful but not dominant revenue line in the FY2026/27 budget. Its real significance may lie elsewhere.
Any tax measure on betting cannot be assessed in isolation from the labour market realities that have made betting a substitute for formal employment for millions of young people.
Survey data on Tanzanian bettors shows that 45% cite financial supplementation as their primary motivation for betting — closely correlated with youth unemployment rates estimated at around 26%. Entertainment (30%) and peer influence (25%) follow as secondary motivations, but the dominant driver is economic necessity, not leisure.
For a generation facing limited formal job openings, irregular agricultural incomes, and a large informal economy with thin margins, betting platforms have become something else entirely: a perceived income stream. Some young people place small, frequent bets not for entertainment, but as a recurring activity they treat with the seriousness of a job — checking odds each morning, following teams and leagues as "market research," and tracking wins and losses like income and expenses.
The data tells a sobering story about what this "employment" actually delivers. Survey findings indicate individual bettors face average monthly losses of TZS 50,000–100,000, with a 40% incidence of debt linked to betting activity. Rather than supplementing income, betting for most participants represents a net erosion of already limited household resources — estimated at 1–2% of individual earnings.
At the same time, 31% of bettors report betting daily — a frequency that survey researchers associate with productivity drags estimated at 2–3% nationally, as time and attention that could go toward income-generating work, skills development, or education is redirected toward betting activity.
Beyond the bettors themselves, betting has created a visible informal economy around it: betting shop agents, SMS and airtime resellers tied to betting platforms, "tip sellers" who sell predictions via social media and messaging groups, and informal odds analysts who build followings online. For many young people in this ecosystem, it genuinely is a source of income — though one entirely dependent on the continued participation (and continued losses) of other bettors.
This creates a structural tension: the same industry that some young people experience as exploitative — eroding their savings through frequent small losses — is, for a smaller number of others, a genuine (if precarious) source of livelihood. Any policy response that simply "cracks down" on betting risks displacing this second group without necessarily helping the first.
A 5% excise duty on stakes will marginally raise the cost of betting and marginally reduce the frequency or size of bets for some participants — particularly price-sensitive small bettors. But it does not address the underlying driver: a youth unemployment rate of approximately 26% that pushes people toward betting as a coping mechanism in the first place.
If the new tax succeeds only in reducing betting volumes without any corresponding improvement in formal employment opportunities, the most likely outcome is substitution — toward unregulated offshore platforms (which the tax cannot easily reach), informal betting networks, or other forms of risk-seeking income generation that may carry even less consumer protection than the regulated GBT-licensed market.
The 5% stake-based excise duty does not affect all participants in the betting ecosystem equally.
Small, infrequent bets. The 5% stake cost is noticeable but unlikely to change behaviour significantly — closer to a minor "convenience cost" on entertainment spending.
Modest ImpactAmong the 31% who bet daily, the 5% excise compounds across many small stakes. Over a month, this can represent a meaningful addition to existing losses of TZS 50,000–100,000.
Significant Cumulative CostFace a structural shift from GGR-based to stake-based taxation alongside the existing tax burden. May see reduced betting volumes if price-sensitive bettors reduce stakes — though historically, betting demand has shown limited elasticity to moderate tax changes.
Adjustment RequiredReceives 10% of new collections — potentially TZS 7.5 billion — earmarked for regulation and supervision. A meaningful boost to enforcement capacity, including against unlicensed operators.
Direct BeneficiaryIf the tax reduces overall betting volumes meaningfully, agent commissions and informal income tied to betting activity could decline — affecting those who rely on this as a livelihood.
Indirect ExposureStake-based excise applies to licensed operators within Tanzania's tax jurisdiction. Unlicensed offshore platforms — already a known leakage point — are not directly captured, potentially widening the price gap in their favour.
Relative Advantage IncreasesTanzania is not alone in grappling with the social cost of a rapidly growing betting market. Neighbouring Kenya offers a useful comparison point.
Kenya passed a Betting Law in August 2025 that went beyond taxation alone — introducing restrictions on betting advertisements during specific daytime and evening hours, and raising minimum betting amounts specifically to reduce access for students and younger users. Tanzanian commentators have pointed to this as an example of a more comprehensive regulatory response, combining fiscal measures with advertising restrictions and access controls.
Tanzania's FY2026/27 approach, by contrast, is primarily fiscal: a stake-based excise duty plus a funding allocation to GBT for enforcement. This is a reasonable starting point, but a narrower toolkit than some regional peers are now deploying.
There is an inherent tension in how government approaches this sector. Gaming tax revenue has grown from TZS 33.6 billion in 2016/17 to roughly TZS 261 billion in 2024/25 — a more than sevenfold increase that has made betting a meaningful and growing contributor to domestic revenue at a time when overall tax-to-GDP remains low and aid is declining.
This creates a structural incentive for government to want the industry to keep growing — even as the same growth is associated with the social costs documented in this analysis: household debt, productivity drags, and a youth population increasingly oriented toward betting as an economic strategy.
The 5% stake-based excise duty, with its 10% GBT allocation, represents an attempt to capture more revenue from this growth while simultaneously funding the regulatory capacity to manage its risks. Whether this balance proves sustainable will depend on whether the GBT allocation translates into meaningful consumer protection — and whether broader youth employment policy keeps pace with a betting market still projected to grow roughly 8.6-fold by 2030.
The 5% excise duty is unlikely to be the government's last word on betting taxation. The underlying fiscal logic points firmly toward further measures.
One of the more telling details of this reform is the decision to direct 10% of the new excise — an estimated TZS 7.5 billion — specifically to the Gaming Board of Tanzania. This suggests that GBT's existing budget has not been sufficient to keep pace with an industry that has grown roughly sevenfold in tax contribution since 2016/17, let alone an industry projected to grow a further 8.6-fold in market size by 2030.
In effect, government is acknowledging that the regulatory apparatus needed to supervise a market of this scale — licensing, compliance inspection, anti-illegal-operator enforcement, responsible-gambling oversight — has been under-resourced relative to the money now flowing through it. Earmarking a share of new tax revenue for the regulator itself is a strong signal: the state recognises this sector requires materially more oversight capacity than it currently funds, and taxation on the sector itself is viewed as the natural source for that funding.
TICGL's earlier research into the football betting economy specifically — The Football Economy of Tanzania: Unlocking Hidden Value in the Betting Market — found that Tanzania's domestic football competitions alone generate an estimated TZS 251–427 billion in annual betting turnover, with the Kariakoo Derby contributing up to TZS 50.8 billion per season from just two matches. That analysis found that the rights holder of this activity — the Tanzania Football Federation — currently earns TZS zero from any of it.
The broader point that research illustrates is structural: enormous sums move through Tanzania's betting ecosystem relative to what is currently captured in formal revenue — whether by football's own governing bodies or, more relevantly for this analysis, by the state. A 5% excise on stakes is a first formal claim on that turnover by the Treasury. Given that the overall market (GGR of USD 72.41M in 2025, projected to USD 623M by 2030) is forecast to grow far faster than most other sectors of the economy, it represents one of the few tax bases in Tanzania that is structurally guaranteed to expand regardless of broader economic conditions.
What makes betting different from most consumption taxes is its demographic foundation. Tanzania's population is young and growing, with the 18–35 cohort — already 74% of bettors — expanding in absolute numbers every year. Combined with persistently high youth unemployment (~26%) and continued expansion of mobile money and internet access (already covering 91–94% of bettors), the conditions that have driven betting's growth are not temporary. If anything, they are intensifying: more young people entering adulthood each year, a labour market that has not yet absorbed them, and ever-easier digital access to betting platforms.
From a pure revenue-planning perspective, this makes betting one of the most predictable growth tax bases available to the Treasury — arguably more predictable than agriculture (weather-dependent), mining (commodity-price-dependent), or manufacturing (investment-dependent). A government searching for domestic revenue sources that can reliably expand year-on-year, in a context where Official Development Assistance is falling by over 39%, has strong fiscal incentive to return to this base repeatedly.
Based on the trajectory observed — and consistent with patterns in other markets — future revenue measures targeting betting could plausibly include: incremental increases to the stake-based excise rate in future budgets (following the same annual-adjustment logic already applied to other excise categories); extension of the gaming tax framework to capture currently unlicensed or offshore platforms, which the current 5% measure does not directly reach; and additional earmarked allocations — beyond the 10% GBT share — toward youth programmes, sports development, or responsible-gambling infrastructure, financed from the same growing base.
For TICGL, the policy question is not whether more betting-related revenue measures will appear — the fiscal logic strongly suggests they will — but whether each successive measure is paired with a genuine improvement in either (a) regulatory protection for the millions of young bettors documented in this analysis, or (b) progress on the youth employment conditions that make betting so central to this demographic in the first place. A tax base that keeps growing because young people have no better economic options is not, ultimately, a sustainable foundation for either fiscal policy or youth welfare — even if it looks attractive on a revenue projection.
The new 5% excise duty on betting stakes is, in isolation, a defensible fiscal measure. It raises a meaningful TZS 74.5 billion, applies a harm-reduction logic by raising the cost of high-frequency betting, and channels 10% of new revenue directly into the regulatory body best placed to address industry risks.
But the measure should be understood for what it is: a tax adjustment on an industry whose explosive growth — from USD 72.41 million in GGR in 2025 toward a projected USD 623 million by 2030 — is itself a symptom of deeper structural conditions. A youth unemployment rate of approximately 26%, combined with near-universal mobile access (94% of bettors use apps), has created an environment where betting functions, for a significant share of young Tanzanians, as a substitute for the formal employment the economy has not yet generated.
Taxing the symptom can fund better management of the symptom — and the GBT allocation is a genuinely positive step in that direction. But it cannot, by itself, change the underlying calculation that leads a 25-year-old with no formal job to treat a betting app as their most accessible economic opportunity. That requires a parallel and sustained focus on the labour market itself — the question TICGL has raised throughout its analysis of the FY2026/27 budget more broadly: is Tanzania creating the conditions for private-sector-led job creation at the pace its youth population requires, or are fiscal interventions like this one being asked to compensate for gaps elsewhere in economic policy?
"A 5% tax on a bet does not change why someone placed it. Until formal employment grows faster than the betting market does, taxation will keep managing the consequences of a problem it cannot solve." — TICGL Economic Research Commentary, June 2026
Bajeti ya 2026/27 imeleta kodi mpya ya asilimia 5% (excise duty) kwenye kiasi cha fedha kinachowekwa kubeti — iwe kwenye michezo ya kubahatisha ya kisheria mitandaoni au maeneo ya kimaeneo, kasino, mashine za "slot", na michezo ya kidijitali. Kodi hii inatarajiwa kuongeza mapato ya Serikali kwa kiasi cha takriban TZS bilioni 74.5, na asilimia 10 ya mapato hayo mapya itapelekwa kwa Bodi ya Michezo ya Kubahatisha (GBT) kwa ajili ya kuimarisha usimamizi na udhibiti wa sekta hii.
Tofauti na kodi ya zamani inayotegemea faida ya kampuni za kubeti (GGR), kodi hii mpya inatozwa moja kwa moja kwenye kiasi unachoweka bet — ushinde au usishinde. Hii ina maana kwamba mtu anayebeti mara nyingi kila siku atahisi mzigo huu zaidi kuliko anayebeti mara chache.
Tafiti zinaonesha kuwa zaidi ya asilimia 56 ya Watanzania wazima (takriban milioni 39.5) wanashiriki kubeti, na asilimia 74 ya hao ni vijana wenye umri wa miaka 18–35. Sababu kubwa ya vijana wengi kushiriki ni tatizo la ukosefu wa ajira — inakadiriwa kuwa karibu asilimia 26 ya vijana hawana ajira rasmi — na hivyo wengi wanaona kubeti kama "kazi" au njia ya kupata kipato cha haraka.
Lakini takwimu zinaonesha ukweli mwingine: wabeti wengi hupoteza kati ya TZS 50,000 hadi 100,000 kwa mwezi, na asilimia 40 wanajikuta kwenye madeni kutokana na kubeti. Badala ya kuongeza kipato, kwa wengi kubeti kunapunguza kipato chao halisi.
Hitimisho la TICGL: Kodi hii mpya ni hatua nzuri ya kifedha na inaweza kusaidia kupunguza athari za kubeti kupitia fedha zitakazopelekwa GBT. Hata hivyo, kodi pekee haitatui tatizo la msingi — ambalo ni ukosefu wa ajira rasmi kwa vijana. Iwapo Serikali haitaongeza kasi ya kuzalisha ajira halisi za kiuchumi kwa vijana, sekta ya kubeti itaendelea kukua, na vijana wataendelea kuiona kama chaguo lao la kiuchumi — hata kama takwimu zinaonesha kuwa wengi wao wanapoteza fedha zaidi kuliko wanavyopata.
Disclaimer: This analysis is produced by TICGL Economic Research based on the FY2026/27 Budget Speech presented to the National Assembly of Tanzania on 11 June 2026, alongside Gaming Board of Tanzania (GBT), Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), and survey-based industry data referenced throughout. Interpretations, assessments, and policy commentary represent the independent analytical position of TICGL and do not constitute tax, legal, or investment advice. If you or someone you know is struggling with gambling-related financial difficulty, consider speaking with a financial counsellor or trusted community support service. © 2026 Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd (TICGL). All rights reserved. | ticgl.com