East / Southern Africa TZS English / Swahili SADC Free Trade Area

Business compliance in Tanzania

Everything a business must do to stay compliant in Tanzania — tax with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), company registration with BRELA, labour, data and licences. Plain English, no jargon.

Revenue authority

Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA)

Companies registry

BRELA

Corporate tax

30%

VAT

18% (mainland) (register at TZS 200 million (mainland))

Labour law

Employment and Labour Relations Act

Social security

the NSSF (national social-security fund)

Data protection

Personal Data Protection Act, 2022

Empowerment / localization

local-content rules in key sectors (e.g. mining, oil & gas)

LABOUR LAW

WHAT IS IT?

Employment in Tanzania is governed by the Employment and Labour Relations Act, with contributions to the NSSF (national social-security fund).

WHEN DOES IT APPLY?

From day one of hiring your first employee in Tanzania. Statutory minimums and written terms apply immediately — there is no informal grace period.

HOW TO COMPLY?

Put every employee on a written contract, register as an employer with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) and the NSSF (national social-security fund), withhold and remit employee taxes, and meet the minimum conditions on hours, leave and termination set by the Employment and Labour Relations Act.

WHY IT MATTERS?

Unfair-dismissal claims, labour-inspector findings and unpaid the NSSF (national social-security fund) contributions carry penalties and back-pay orders — and can jeopardise work permits for foreign staff. Always confirm the current detail with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) or a local professional.

TAX & CUSTOMS

WHAT IS IT?

Business tax in Tanzania is run by Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA). Companies pay corporate income tax (headline rate 30%) and most charge VAT at 18% (mainland); cross-border goods attract customs duty.

WHEN DOES IT APPLY?

From the moment you incorporate and start trading. VAT registration becomes compulsory once taxable turnover passes TZS 200 million (mainland).

HOW TO COMPLY?

Register for a tax number with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), file the required returns (corporate income tax, VAT, employee taxes) on time, and keep proper records. Register separately for customs if you import or export.

WHY IT MATTERS?

Late or missing returns attract penalties and interest, and Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) can raise estimated assessments or withhold your tax-compliance status — stalling tenders, contracts and banking. Always confirm the current detail with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) or a local professional.

COMPANY REG

WHAT IS IT?

Companies in Tanzania are incorporated and kept on record by BRELA.

WHEN DOES IT APPLY?

Before you trade through a company. A sole proprietor may only need a business-name registration, but a company must be incorporated and kept in good standing.

HOW TO COMPLY?

Reserve a name and file incorporation documents with BRELA, appoint directors, then register the company for tax with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA). Keep annual filings and ownership details current.

WHY IT MATTERS?

Trading through an unregistered or lapsed company, or failing to keep filings up to date, risks penalties, personal liability and deregistration. Always confirm the current detail with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) or a local professional.

B-BBEE / LOCALIZATION

WHAT IS IT?

Tanzania's empowerment / localization angle: local-content rules in key sectors (e.g. mining, oil & gas).

WHEN DOES IT APPLY?

Mainly when you bid for government work or large contracts, and for licences in some regulated sectors. Buyers often ask for proof before contracting.

HOW TO COMPLY?

Establish your status under local-content rules in key sectors (e.g. mining, oil & gas), and build local ownership, employment and procurement where the framework rewards it. Keep your proof current.

WHY IT MATTERS?

Without the right status you lose points — or are excluded — on tenders and supplier programmes. Always confirm the current detail with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) or a local professional.

POPIA / PRIVACY

WHAT IS IT?

Data protection in Tanzania is governed by the Personal Data Protection Act, 2022.

WHEN DOES IT APPLY?

Whenever you process personal information about customers, staff or suppliers — which covers almost every business.

HOW TO COMPLY?

Process data lawfully and for a clear purpose, get consent where required, keep it secure, appoint an information officer where the law requires one, and handle breaches and access requests properly.

WHY IT MATTERS?

Regulators can impose fines and enforcement notices, and cross-border data transfers can be restricted — on top of the reputational damage of a breach. Always confirm the current detail with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) or a local professional.

LICENCES & PERMITS

WHAT IS IT?

Beyond the universal registrations, Tanzania requires sector-specific licences — construction, private security, financial services, food and health, alcohol, transport and more each have their own regulator.

WHEN DOES IT APPLY?

Before you operate in the regulated activity — often before you can even tender or import.

HOW TO COMPLY?

Identify your sector regulator(s), meet their requirements (registration, premises, qualifications, standards) and renew on time. A municipal trading licence and zoning often apply on top.

WHY IT MATTERS?

Operating without the right licence can mean fines, closure, confiscated goods and disqualification from contracts. Always confirm the current detail with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) or a local professional.

Where to go

Tanzania — frequently asked questions

What is the corporate tax rate in Tanzania?

Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) levies corporate income tax at 30%. VAT is charged at 18% (mainland). Rates are set in the budget and change — always confirm the current figure with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA).

How do I register a company in Tanzania?

Companies in Tanzania are incorporated with BRELA: reserve a name, file the incorporation documents, appoint directors, then register the company for tax with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA).

When must I register for VAT in Tanzania?

VAT registration becomes compulsory once your taxable turnover passes TZS 200 million (mainland). You can often register voluntarily below that — check with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA).

What labour law applies in Tanzania?

Employment in Tanzania is governed by the Employment and Labour Relations Act, with social-security contributions to the NSSF (national social-security fund). Written contracts and statutory minimums apply from the first employee.

Coming to Tanzania pages

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Reviewed June 2026 from official sources. General information only, not legal, tax or accounting advice — confirm with Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) or a registered professional.