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VAT on Digital Services in Mauritius: 2026 Compliance Checklist for Local Businesses and Foreign Suppliers

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last updated: 13 May 2026

The Finance Act 2025 expanded Mauritius’s Value Added Tax regime to capture digital and electronic services supplied by foreign providers, making VAT on digital services in Mauritius a live compliance obligation from 1 January 2026. Under the amended VAT Act, every non-resident supplier that delivers qualifying e-services to customers located in Mauritius must register with the Mauritius Revenue Authority (MRA), charge VAT at the standard 15 per cent rate, and file periodic returns, regardless of turnover. Mauritian businesses that purchase these services face their own accounting duties, including reverse-charge self-assessment and proper disclosure in year-end financial statements.

This guide sets out the legal basis, registration process, invoicing rules, worked journal entries and penalty framework that CFOs, finance managers, in-house accountants and foreign digital suppliers need to navigate VAT compliance 2026 in Mauritius.

What you must do now:

  • Register. Foreign suppliers of digital services must apply for VAT registration through the MRA e-services portal.
  • Adjust invoicing. All B2C invoices to Mauritian consumers must show 15 per cent VAT as a separate line item.
  • Update ERP and ledgers. Create VAT output and control accounts; configure reverse-charge posting rules for B2B imports.
  • Review contracts. Confirm whether pricing is VAT-inclusive or VAT-exclusive and update terms of sale accordingly.

What Changed, Legal Basis and Key Dates for VAT on Digital Services in Mauritius

The legislative trigger is the Finance Act 2025, which amended the Value Added Tax Act 1998 to bring digital and electronic services supplied by non-resident providers within the Mauritius VAT net. The amendment introduced a new definition of “digital or electronic services” and extended the place-of-supply rules so that services consumed by a person located in Mauritius are treated as supplied in Mauritius, even where the supplier has no physical presence on the island. The MRA subsequently published dedicated guidance and a downloadable “Guide for Foreign Suppliers of Digital and Electronic Services” setting out detailed registration, filing and payment procedures.

The Finance Bill 2025 Mauritius provisions align the country with the OECD’s International VAT/GST Guidelines and mirror comparable regimes already operational in South Africa, Kenya, the EU and Australia. Industry observers expect the new rules to level the playing field between domestic vendors, who have always charged VAT, and foreign digital competitors that previously supplied Mauritian customers VAT-free.

Quick Timeline

Date Legislative / Regulatory Act Practical Effect
Mid-2025 Finance Bill 2025 tabled and passed by Parliament Amendment to VAT Act confirmed; signals upcoming compliance window
Late 2025 Finance Act 2025 published; MRA releases “Guide for Foreign Suppliers” (PDF) Detailed procedural guidance available; foreign suppliers can begin registration
1 January 2026 Enforcement effective date All qualifying digital/electronic supplies to Mauritius attract 15% VAT; registration mandatory
20 February 2026 First VAT return deadline (for January 2026 period) Foreign suppliers must file and remit VAT collected in January by this date

Who Must Register, Resident vs Non-Resident Obligations

The MRA guidance is unambiguous: foreign suppliers of digital or electronic services to customers in Mauritius must register for VAT, irrespective of their annual turnover. There is no de minimis threshold. This represents a significant departure from the standard VAT registration rules that apply to resident businesses, where a turnover threshold ordinarily determines whether registration is compulsory.

Determining Whether Your Customers Are in Mauritius

The place-of-supply test uses multiple indicators to establish whether the recipient is located in Mauritius. The MRA guidance directs suppliers to consider two or more of the following factors:

  • Billing address. The address associated with the customer’s payment instrument or account.
  • IP address or geolocation. The network address from which the service is accessed.
  • Bank or payment details. Whether the payment originates from a Mauritian financial institution.
  • Country dialling code. The SIM or fixed-line telephone prefix associated with the customer.

Where two or more indicators point to Mauritius, the supply is treated as made to a person in Mauritius and VAT must be charged.

Permanent Establishment Exception

A foreign supplier that already maintains a permanent establishment (PE) in Mauritius does not use the foreign-supplier registration stream. Instead, it registers under the standard resident rules and is subject to the full suite of domestic VAT obligations, including issuing tax invoices compliant with the resident format.

Registration and Reporting Obligations, Comparison Table

Entity Type Registration Required? Reporting / VAT Accounting Obligation
Foreign supplier with no PE in Mauritius Yes, mandatory regardless of turnover Register with MRA; charge 15% on B2C supplies; file returns; remit VAT
Foreign supplier with PE in Mauritius Yes, under resident rules if PE present Charge VAT as resident vendor; full domestic filing obligations
Mauritian business (B2B recipient) No additional registration for the import side Reverse charge on imported services; account for output VAT and reclaim input VAT where permitted

In-Scope Services, Definitions and Examples

The Finance Act 2025 and MRA VAT guidance define “digital or electronic services” broadly. Any service delivered over the internet or an electronic network that is essentially automated, requiring minimal human intervention, falls within scope. The following categories are expressly captured under VAT on e-services in Mauritius:

  • Software as a Service (SaaS). Cloud-based accounting software, CRM platforms, project-management tools.
  • Cloud computing and hosting. Virtual servers, data storage, platform-as-a-service and infrastructure-as-a-service.
  • Streaming and digital content. Video-on-demand (e.g., Netflix, Disney+), music streaming, podcasts, e-books, online newspapers behind paywalls.
  • Online advertising. Search-engine ads, social-media advertising, programmatic display campaigns sold to Mauritian advertisers.
  • App stores and in-app purchases. Downloads of software applications, games, and digital add-ons.
  • Online marketplace facilitation fees. Commissions and listing fees charged by platforms that connect buyers and sellers.
  • E-learning platforms. Pre-recorded courses, automated training modules, virtual classrooms that are predominantly automated.

Services that involve significant human input, such as bespoke consultancy delivered via video call or one-to-one tutoring, generally fall outside the automated-supply definition. Where a service blends automated and human elements, the predominant character of the supply determines its classification.

VAT Registration Process, Step-by-Step Checklist for Foreign Suppliers

The MRA has established a dedicated electronic registration pathway for foreign suppliers VAT Mauritius obligations. The downloadable “Guide for Foreign Suppliers of Digital and Electronic Services” sets out the following steps:

  1. Create an MRA e-services account. Navigate to the MRA e-services portal and select the foreign-supplier registration category. You will need an email address and basic contact details to create the account.
  2. Complete the registration application. Supply the following information:
    • Full legal name and registered address of the entity
    • Country of incorporation and tax identification number in home jurisdiction
    • Details of a contact person with authority to act on behalf of the entity
    • Description of the digital or electronic services supplied to Mauritian customers
    • Estimated value of annual supplies to Mauritius
  3. Appoint a local tax representative (where required). The MRA guidance indicates that a foreign supplier whose annual supplies to Mauritius exceed MUR 3 million must appoint a local tax representative. The representative acts as the MRA’s point of contact and bears joint liability for VAT obligations.
  4. Receive your VAT registration number (VRN). Once approved, the MRA issues a VRN. This number must appear on all invoices and VAT returns.
  5. Set up electronic filing. Returns are filed exclusively through the MRA portal. Configure access credentials and familiarise your finance team with the return template before the first filing deadline.
  6. Determine filing frequency. Returns are due by the 20th of the month following the end of the reporting period. Monthly filing is the default; confirm with MRA whether quarterly filing is available based on volume.

Practical tip: Begin the registration process well before the first supply date. Early registration allows time to resolve portal issues, align ERP tax codes and test invoice templates.

Pricing, Invoicing and Collection, B2C vs B2B Practical Steps

Getting invoicing right is critical for both audit defence and customer transparency. The MRA guidance prescribes specific information that must appear on every invoice issued by a registered foreign supplier.

B2C Invoicing (Foreign Supplier to Mauritian Consumer)

When supplying digital services directly to individual consumers, the foreign supplier must issue an invoice, or a document that functions as an invoice, containing at minimum:

  • Supplier details: Name, address, country, and VRN issued by MRA
  • Customer details: Name and address (or identifiable reference)
  • Invoice date and unique sequential number
  • Description of the digital service
  • Amount exclusive of VAT
  • VAT amount at 15 per cent, shown as a separate line
  • Total amount inclusive of VAT
  • Currency: Amounts may be denominated in a foreign currency, but VAT must be converted to Mauritian Rupees (MUR) at the exchange rate prevailing on the date of supply for reporting purposes

B2B Supplies, Reverse Charge Treatment

Where the customer is a VAT-registered Mauritian business, the reverse-charge mechanism may apply. In this scenario, the foreign supplier does not charge VAT on the invoice. Instead, the Mauritian purchaser self-assesses 15 per cent VAT as output tax and simultaneously claims input tax credit (subject to normal deductibility rules). The foreign supplier’s invoice should clearly state that the supply is subject to reverse charge and that the Mauritian recipient is responsible for accounting for VAT.

Marketplace Obligations

Digital marketplaces that facilitate supplies between third-party vendors and Mauritian consumers may be deemed the supplier for VAT purposes. Where the marketplace controls key elements of the transaction, setting terms, authorising payment or controlling delivery, the likely practical effect is that the marketplace itself must register, charge and remit VAT, relieving the underlying vendor of that obligation.

Accounting Treatment for VAT on Digital Services, Worked Journal Entries

Correct accounting treatment for VAT on digital services is the area where the most practical errors occur. Below are two worked examples covering the most common scenarios: a B2C sale by a foreign supplier and a B2B reverse-charge import by a Mauritian company.

Worked Example 1, Foreign Supplier: B2C Sale to Mauritian Consumer

Scenario: A SaaS provider incorporated in Singapore sells a monthly subscription to a Mauritian individual for MUR 10,000 (exclusive of VAT). VAT at 15 per cent = MUR 1,500. Total collected = MUR 11,500.

Account Debit (MUR) Credit (MUR)
Bank / Receivable (cash collected from consumer) 11,500
Revenue, Digital services 10,000
VAT Output Payable (MRA liability) 1,500

On remittance to MRA (by the 20th of the following month):

Account Debit (MUR) Credit (MUR)
VAT Output Payable (MRA liability) 1,500
Bank 1,500

ERP configuration note: Create a dedicated tax code (e.g., “MU-VAT-DS-15”) mapped to the VAT Output Payable control account. This isolates Mauritius digital-services VAT from other jurisdictions and simplifies return preparation.

Worked Example 2, Mauritian Company: Reverse Charge on Imported SaaS

Scenario: A Mauritian-registered company purchases cloud hosting from a foreign supplier for MUR 50,000 (no VAT charged on the invoice). The Mauritian company must self-assess VAT at 15 per cent = MUR 7,500.

Account Debit (MUR) Credit (MUR)
IT Expense, Cloud hosting 50,000
VAT Input Receivable (reverse charge) 7,500
Accounts Payable, Foreign supplier 50,000
VAT Output Payable (reverse-charge liability) 7,500

The VAT Input Receivable and VAT Output Payable entries offset each other if the Mauritian company is entitled to full input-tax deduction. The net cash impact is zero, but both amounts must appear on the VAT return. Where the purchaser makes exempt supplies and input-tax recovery is restricted, the non-deductible portion of the MUR 7,500 becomes an additional cost recognised in profit or loss.

Month-End Reconciliation and Year-End Disclosure

Finance teams should reconcile the VAT control accounts monthly, matching the closing balance on VAT Output Payable to the amount declared on the MRA return. At year-end, auditors will expect to see:

  • Balance-sheet disclosure. VAT payable (current liability) and any VAT receivable (current asset) shown separately in the notes to the financial statements.
  • Contingent liability note. If the company has identified historic non-compliance (e.g., reverse-charge entries omitted in prior periods), disclose the estimated exposure.
  • Related-party transactions. Where digital services are procured from group companies, confirm that VAT has been accounted for correctly to avoid transfer-pricing and VAT audit overlap.

VAT Reporting, Returns and Payments

All VAT returns for foreign suppliers of digital services must be filed electronically through the MRA portal. The standard filing frequency is monthly, with the return and corresponding payment due by the 20th of the month following the end of the reporting period. For example, a return covering supplies made in January 2026 must be filed and paid by 20 February 2026.

Payment is made electronically. The MRA accepts bank transfers through authorised payment channels linked to the e-services portal. Foreign suppliers must ensure that VAT collected in foreign currency is converted to Mauritian Rupees at the exchange rate applicable on the date of each supply. Any exchange-rate differences between the date of supply and the date of remittance are for the supplier’s account and do not adjust the VAT payable to MRA.

Late filing attracts automatic penalties. Late payment incurs interest charges. The MRA guidance and the downloadable Guide for Foreign Suppliers set out the specific penalty rates. Finance teams should diarise the 20th-of-month deadline and build automated reminders into their reporting calendar to avoid unnecessary exposure.

Penalties, Audits and Voluntary Disclosures, Practical Mitigation

Non-registration is the highest-risk trigger for MRA enforcement action. A foreign supplier that makes taxable supplies into Mauritius without obtaining a VRN faces backdated VAT assessments, penalties for late registration and interest on unpaid tax from the date the obligation arose. Early indications suggest the MRA will prioritise foreign suppliers with significant Mauritian customer bases that have not yet registered.

Common audit triggers include:

  • Unreported digital-service revenue. Bank-receipt patterns showing Mauritian-sourced payments that do not correspond to declared VAT.
  • Mismatched returns. Discrepancies between reported turnover on income-tax filings (where applicable) and VAT returns.
  • Customer complaints. Mauritian businesses that request input-tax credit evidence from foreign suppliers who are not registered.

Voluntary disclosure remains the most effective mitigation strategy. Suppliers that identify historic non-compliance should prepare full reconciliations, calculate the VAT shortfall with interest, and approach the MRA proactively. Demonstrating good faith through voluntary disclosure typically reduces penalty exposure compared with assessments initiated by the MRA itself.

Practical Checklist for Mauritian Finance Teams

Mauritian businesses that purchase digital services from abroad must take their own compliance steps. The following checklist applies to finance teams managing VAT on digital services in Mauritius from the buyer’s perspective:

  • Verify supplier registration status. Ask every foreign digital-service provider whether they hold an MRA VRN. If they do, request a VAT invoice.
  • Self-account where required. If the supplier is not registered and the reverse-charge mechanism applies, calculate 15 per cent VAT on the gross invoice amount and post the reverse-charge journal entries described above.
  • Update the purchase ledger. Flag all digital-service invoices from foreign suppliers with a dedicated expense code to streamline VAT return preparation.
  • Implement internal controls. Add a reverse-charge review step to the monthly close process. Assign a named reviewer responsible for ensuring all imported e-service invoices have been captured.
  • Retain documentation. Keep copies of supplier invoices, proof of payment, exchange-rate evidence and reverse-charge workings for a minimum of five years to satisfy MRA audit requirements.

Conclusion

VAT on digital services in Mauritius is no longer a future obligation, it is an active compliance requirement. Foreign suppliers that have not yet registered should do so immediately through the MRA portal. Mauritian finance teams should verify that reverse-charge procedures are embedded in their monthly close and that all imported e-service invoices are captured in the purchase ledger. Early action, registration, ERP configuration, contract review and staff training, remains the most effective way to avoid penalties, protect input-tax claims, and ensure audit readiness. For tailored guidance on registration, accounting treatment or penalty remediation, consult a qualified accounting and tax adviser with Mauritius expertise.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mohamed Reshad Sadool at Accounting & Consulting Group / Comprehensive Financial Services, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Mauritius Revenue Authority, VAT on Digital or Electronic Services from Foreign Suppliers
  2. MRA, Guide for Foreign Suppliers of Digital and Electronic Services (PDF)
  3. Andersen Mauritius, Finance Act 2025 Updates on Digital or Electronic Services (PDF)
  4. PwC Mauritius, VAT on Digital and Electronic Services
  5. Deloitte Mauritius, VAT on Digital and Electronic Services
  6. Forvis Mazars Mauritius, Suppliers of Digital Electronic Services
  7. Fonoa, Mauritius VAT Foreign Digital Services 2026
  8. VATCalc, Mauritius VAT on Foreign Digital Services
  9. Bowmans, Mauritius Introduction of VAT on Digital and Electronic Services by Foreign Suppliers

FAQs

Will foreign suppliers need to register for VAT in Mauritius from 1 January 2026?
Yes. The Finance Act 2025 and MRA guidance make registration compulsory for all foreign suppliers of digital or electronic services to customers in Mauritius, with no turnover threshold. Registration is completed through the MRA e-services portal.
The standard rate of 15 per cent applies. There is no reduced or zero rate for digital or electronic services supplied by foreign providers.
Through the reverse-charge mechanism. The Mauritian purchaser self-assesses 15 per cent VAT as output tax and claims a corresponding input-tax credit where the service relates to taxable supplies. Both the output and input amounts must appear on the VAT return.
Where a marketplace controls key transaction elements, such as setting terms of sale, authorising payment or managing delivery, it may be treated as the supplier for VAT purposes. In that case, the marketplace must register, charge and remit VAT on behalf of the underlying vendors.
The MRA imposes automatic penalties for late registration, late filing and late payment. Interest accrues on unpaid VAT from the due date. Backdated assessments can cover the entire period from 1 January 2026 onward, making early registration the most cost-effective compliance strategy.
Foreign suppliers whose annual supplies to Mauritius exceed MUR 3 million are required to appoint a local tax representative. The representative is jointly liable for the supplier’s VAT obligations and serves as the MRA’s local point of contact.
No. While invoices may be denominated in a foreign currency, VAT amounts must be converted to Mauritian Rupees at the exchange rate prevailing on the date of supply. All return filings and payments are submitted in MUR.
Where the reverse-charge mechanism applies, the foreign supplier does not charge VAT. The Mauritian business self-accounts for the tax. The foreign supplier’s invoice should note that the supply is subject to reverse charge.
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VAT on Digital Services in Mauritius: 2026 Compliance Checklist for Local Businesses and Foreign Suppliers

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