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companies act amendments tanzania

Tanzania Companies Act Amendments 2026: Practical Compliance Checklist for Directors, Company Secretaries & Investors

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last reviewed: May 14, 2026

The Companies Act amendments Tanzania introduced through the Written Laws (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act, 2026 represent the most significant overhaul of corporate governance obligations in Tanzania in over a decade. Backed by BRELA’s newly published Companies (Forms) (Amendment) Rules, 2026, the changes impose immediate duties on every company registered under Cap 212, from formalising nominee arrangements to expanding beneficial ownership disclosure for both domestic and foreign entities. Directors, company secretaries and investors who fail to act promptly face administrative penalties, personal liability for false statements, and potential regulatory sanctions from the Registrar of Companies. This guide provides the actionable, step-by-step compliance checklist that officers and advisors need right now.

Quick Overview of the 2026 Companies Act & Written Laws Amendments

The Written Laws (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act, 2026 amends several provisions of the Companies Act, Cap 212 (R.E. 2023). The legislative package addresses corporate transparency gaps that Tanzania’s regulatory authorities and international partners had identified, particularly around hidden ownership structures and undisclosed nominee relationships. Industry observers expect these reforms to bring Tanzania closer to global anti-money laundering and beneficial ownership standards already adopted across East Africa.

The principal changes fall into four categories:

  • Nominee formalisation. The Act inserts precise statutory definitions for “nominee” and “nominator” into section 2 of the Companies Act, ending years of ambiguity around informal nominee arrangements.
  • Register of nominees. Companies must now establish and maintain a register of nominee directors and nominee shareholders, recording prescribed particulars and updating the register when arrangements change.
  • Beneficial ownership expansion. Disclosure obligations are widened, directors or company secretaries must submit beneficial ownership details to BRELA, and foreign companies operating in Tanzania must disclose the beneficial owners of their controlling persons.
  • Updated BRELA forms. BRELA’s Companies (Forms) (Amendment) Rules, 2026, published on 20 March 2026, introduce new form fields for nominee particulars, beneficial ownership data and specific company objectives at incorporation.

Key Definitions Introduced

The 2026 amendments to section 2 of the Companies Act introduce definitions that every compliance officer should internalise:

  • “Nominee”, a person acting under a written arrangement on behalf of another person (the nominator) in holding shares, exercising voting rights, or serving as a director.
  • “Beneficial owner”, the natural person who ultimately owns or controls a company, whether directly or indirectly, including through nominee or trust arrangements.
  • “Specific objects”, companies are now required to specify their business objectives upon incorporation, replacing the previous regime that permitted general-purpose memoranda.

Who Is Affected by the Companies Act Amendments Tanzania

The 2026 changes affect every entity registered or operating under the Companies Act, Cap 212. The obligations vary by entity type and officer role. The following table provides a quick-reference comparison.

Entity Type New Reporting / Disclosure Obligations (2026) Who Signs / Files
Domestic private company Maintain register of nominees; update UBO register for owners meeting the prescribed threshold; file amended BRELA forms on any changes Director or company secretary
Public company Same as private company, plus stricter company secretary qualification requirements; enhanced director oversight duties Directors jointly ensure compliance; company secretary to file
Foreign company (branch) Must disclose beneficial ownership of controlling persons; update registered agent details on BRELA forms Local representative or registered agent to file; director affirmation may be required

For public companies, the amendments reinforce company secretarial requirements in Tanzania by mandating that directors take all reasonable steps to appoint a qualified company secretary, an advocate, certified public accountant, or auditor, reflecting a shift toward professional governance standards across all listed and public entities.

BRELA Companies Forms 2026, What Changed and How to File

BRELA published its Companies (Forms) (Amendment) Rules, 2026 on 20 March 2026, introducing updated statutory forms that align with the new legislative requirements. Companies filing any return, notice or application with the Registrar must now use these revised forms.

Summary of Form Changes

The BRELA companies forms 2026 include several critical additions:

  • Nominee particulars fields. Forms relating to the register of directors and secretaries now require prescribed nominee particulars, including the name, address and national identification details of both the nominee and the nominator.
  • Beneficial ownership data. Incorporation and annual return forms include new mandatory fields for beneficial ownership information, requiring disclosure of any natural person who meets the ownership or control threshold.
  • Specific objects clause. Incorporation forms now require applicants to state the specific objects and business activities of the company, replacing the former general-objects approach.
  • Paid-up vs. nominal share capital. Disclosure of both paid-up and nominal share capital is now required on relevant forms, improving transparency around actual capitalisation.

Step-by-Step BRELA Filing Process

To file the new BRELA forms correctly, follow this procedural checklist:

  1. Download the correct form. Access the updated forms from the BRELA website (Companies (Forms) (Amendment) Rules, 2026 PDF).
  2. Complete all mandatory fields. Pay particular attention to the new nominee particulars and beneficial ownership sections. Leave no mandatory field blank, incomplete forms will be rejected.
  3. Attach supporting identity documents. Include certified copies of national identification cards or passports for all nominees, nominators and beneficial owners disclosed.
  4. Obtain the required signatures. Notices regarding beneficial ownership changes must be signed by at least one director of the company. For nominee disclosures, the company secretary or a director must sign.
  5. Submit via BRELA’s online portal. Upload the completed form and supporting documents through the BRELA Online Registration System (ORS). Retain the electronic submission receipt.
  6. Pay the prescribed fee. Filing fees are payable through BRELA’s designated payment channels. Confirm the current fee schedule on the BRELA portal before submission.
  7. Retain certified copies. Keep hard-copy certified duplicates of all filed forms, supporting documents and the BRELA acknowledgement receipt in the company’s statutory records.

Immediate Actions for Officers

Officers responsible for how to file BRELA forms should take three steps immediately: audit all existing filed forms for completeness against the new requirements, prepare amendments where data gaps exist, and calendar the next filing deadline to ensure submission on the updated templates.

Beneficial Ownership Disclosure, Obligations and Step-by-Step Compliance

The expanded beneficial ownership Tanzania regime under the 2026 amendments creates ongoing disclosure duties that apply to both local and foreign companies. These obligations build on the existing Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations and strengthen enforcement through BRELA.

Who Is a Beneficial Owner

A beneficial owner is any natural person who directly or indirectly:

  • Holds a prescribed percentage of shares or voting rights in the company;
  • Exercises significant influence or control over the company through any means, including nominee arrangements, trusts or informal agreements; or
  • Has the right to appoint or remove a majority of the board of directors.

Where no natural person meets these criteria, the senior managing official of the company is deemed the beneficial owner for reporting purposes.

Required Information

For each beneficial owner, the following particulars must be collected and filed:

  • Full legal name and any former names
  • Date of birth and nationality
  • Residential address (not a P.O. Box)
  • National identification number or passport number
  • Nature and extent of interest held or control exercised
  • Date on which the person became a beneficial owner

Filing and Update Triggers

Companies must file beneficial ownership information with BRELA at the following trigger points:

  1. At incorporation. Beneficial ownership details must accompany the incorporation application on the new BRELA forms.
  2. On any change. Within the prescribed period after a change in beneficial ownership occurs, the company must file an updated notice with BRELA, signed by at least one director.
  3. Annual confirmation. Beneficial ownership information should be confirmed or updated as part of the annual return filing cycle.

Foreign companies registered in Tanzania face an additional obligation: they must disclose the beneficial owners of the overseas parent entity or controlling persons, not merely the local branch representatives. This requirement brings Tanzania into alignment with FATF transparency recommendations and reflects a broader regional trend across East African jurisdictions.

Nominee Arrangements, Registration, Registers and Sample Wording

One of the most consequential Companies Act amendments Tanzania introduces is the formal regulation of nominee directors and nominee shareholders. Prior to 2026, nominee arrangements operated in a legal grey zone, widely used but without statutory registration requirements. The 2026 reforms close this gap decisively.

When a Nominee Must Be Declared

A nominee arrangement must be declared to the company and recorded in the register of nominees whenever:

  • A person is appointed as a director on behalf of, or at the direction of, another person (nominee director);
  • Shares are held by a person acting under a written arrangement for the benefit of another (nominee shareholder); or
  • An existing informal arrangement is formalised, all pre-existing nominee arrangements should be documented and registered as a matter of prudent compliance.

What Must Be Included in the Nominee Register

The register of nominees must contain the following prescribed particulars:

  • Full name and address of the nominee
  • Full name and address of the nominator (the person on whose behalf the nominee acts)
  • Date the nominee arrangement commenced
  • Nature of the arrangement (directorship, shareholding, or both)
  • Number and class of shares held as nominee, where applicable
  • Date the arrangement was terminated, if applicable

Sample Register Entry and Board Resolution

Sample nominee register entry:

“[Name of Nominee], of [Address], is recorded as holding [number] ordinary shares in [Company Name] as nominee for [Name of Nominator], of [Address], pursuant to a written nominee arrangement dated [Date]. This entry was recorded on [Date of entry] by [Name of company secretary / director].”

Sample board resolution snippet:

“RESOLVED that the company secretary be and is hereby directed to establish a register of nominees in accordance with the Companies Act, Cap 212 (as amended), and to record therein the particulars of all nominee directors and nominee shareholders as prescribed.”

These templates are provided as starting points. Companies should adapt the wording to reflect their specific governance framework and seek legal review before filing.

Practical Compliance Checklist, Actions for Directors, Company Secretaries and Investors

The following 20-point checklist consolidates all company secretarial requirements Tanzania officers must address under the 2026 amendments. Assign responsibility, set deadlines and track completion.

  1. Obtain the updated BRELA forms. Download the Companies (Forms) (Amendment) Rules, 2026 from the BRELA website.
  2. Audit existing company registers. Review the register of directors, register of members and any informal nominee records for completeness.
  3. Establish a register of nominees. Create a dedicated register if one does not already exist; populate it with all known nominee arrangements.
  4. Collect nominee particulars. Request full identification details from all nominee directors and nominee shareholders.
  5. Collect nominator particulars. Obtain and verify the identity and address of every nominator behind a nominee arrangement.
  6. Review and update the beneficial ownership register. Confirm all natural persons meeting the beneficial ownership threshold are accurately recorded.
  7. Prepare a written nominee arrangement. Where informal arrangements exist, formalise them in a signed written document specifying the terms.
  8. Pass a board resolution. Approve the creation of the register of nominees and authorise the company secretary to make entries and file with BRELA.
  9. Complete the new BRELA forms. Fill in all updated fields, nominee particulars, beneficial ownership data, specific objects and paid-up capital.
  10. Verify specific objects clause. Ensure the company’s memorandum states specific business objectives; amend the memorandum if it currently uses a general-objects clause.
  11. Obtain director signatures. Have at least one director sign all beneficial ownership notices and nominee disclosure forms.
  12. File updated forms with BRELA. Submit via the online portal; retain the submission receipt and a certified hard copy.
  13. Pay filing fees. Confirm and process payment through BRELA’s designated channels.
  14. Update the company’s articles of association. If the articles conflict with the new nominee or disclosure requirements, prepare and file amendments.
  15. Notify shareholders. Inform all shareholders of the new disclosure obligations and request voluntary confirmation of any nominee arrangements.
  16. Train board members. Brief directors on their personal liability for false or incomplete filings under the amended Act.
  17. Calendar annual return dates. Set reminders for the annual return cycle to include beneficial ownership confirmation and nominee register updates.
  18. Implement change-event monitoring. Create an internal process to identify and report changes in beneficial ownership or nominee arrangements within the prescribed period.
  19. Engage external advisors. Where cross-border structures or complex nominee chains are involved, seek professional legal and secretarial support.
  20. Document everything. Maintain a comprehensive audit trail of all compliance steps taken, forms filed, and internal governance decisions.

Timeline, Transitional Rules and Enforcement

Understanding when each obligation takes effect is critical for compliance planning. The following table summarises the key dates, transitional provisions and enforcement framework.

Instrument / Obligation Effective Date / Deadline Enforcement Body
Written Laws (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act, 2026, Companies Act provisions Upon Presidential assent and gazette publication (2026) Registrar of Companies / BRELA
BRELA Companies (Forms) (Amendment) Rules, 2026 Published 20 March 2026, in force BRELA
Nominee register, establishment and initial population Immediately upon commencement of the Act BRELA / Registrar
Beneficial ownership filings, new incorporations Required on all applications from commencement date BRELA
Existing companies, transitional filings Industry observers expect BRELA to set a transitional window; monitor gazette notices for confirmed deadlines BRELA

Recommended 30/60/90-day action plan:

  • Within 30 days: Complete the register audit and establish the nominee register; pass the board resolution.
  • Within 60 days: File all updated BRELA forms; formalise all written nominee arrangements; train the board.
  • Within 90 days: Implement the ongoing change-event monitoring process; confirm beneficial ownership data against the annual return cycle.

Penalties for non-compliance include administrative fines imposed by BRELA, personal liability for directors who submit false or misleading information, and potential restrictions on the company’s ability to transact at the Registrar’s office until deficiencies are cured.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

The 2026 Companies Act amendments Tanzania introduced through the Written Laws (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act and BRELA’s updated Companies Forms create a new corporate transparency baseline. Every company registered under Cap 212, domestic or foreign, must act now to establish nominee registers, update beneficial ownership records and file on the correct templates. Officers who treat these changes as a simple form update risk regulatory penalties and personal liability. The practical compliance checklist above provides a structured, trackable path to full compliance.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ernestilla Bahati at Ernestilla, Mafita & Company Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. BRELA, Companies (Forms) (Amendment) Rules, 2026
  2. BRELA, The Companies Act, Revised Edition 2023
  3. Rive & Co, Tanzania Proposes Changes to Laws via the Miscellaneous Amendments Act 2026
  4. Rex Attorneys, Proposed Amendments to the Companies Act Tanzania 2026
  5. Theodore Attorneys, The 2026 Written Laws Miscellaneous Amendments
  6. DarState Attorneys, Key Proposed Amendments to the Tanzanian Companies Act
  7. FB Attorneys, Beneficial Ownership in Tanzania
  8. Clyde & Co, Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations

FAQs

What are the most important Companies Act changes in Tanzania 2026?
The 2026 Written Laws introduce statutory definitions of “nominee” and “beneficial owner,” mandate a register of nominees, expand beneficial ownership disclosure obligations for all companies including foreign branches, and require updated BRELA forms with new mandatory data fields.
Yes. Nominee particulars must be recorded in a dedicated company register and certain details must be submitted to BRELA using the updated 2026 forms. Companies should also maintain a signed, written nominee arrangement on file.
Company secretaries must review existing UBO records, confirm all beneficial owners against the prescribed thresholds, prepare and submit BRELA filings for any changes, and ensure all register updates are properly signed and retained in statutory records.
Download the updated forms from the BRELA website, complete all mandatory fields including nominee and UBO sections, attach certified identity documents, obtain the required director or company secretary signature, submit via the BRELA online portal and pay the prescribed fee.
Penalties include administrative fines from BRELA, potential personal sanctions for directors who submit false statements, and possible restrictions on company transactions at the Registrar’s office until all filing deficiencies are remedied.
BRELA’s Companies (Forms) (Amendment) Rules were published on 20 March 2026 and are currently in force. The Written Laws (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act, 2026 takes effect upon Presidential assent and gazette publication. Companies should monitor the Government Gazette for confirmed commencement dates.
Yes. Foreign companies must now disclose the beneficial owners of their controlling persons, not merely the local branch representatives, and file updated registered agent details on the new BRELA forms.
Companies incorporating under the amended Act must state specific business objectives in their memorandum of association. The previous practice of using general-purpose memoranda is no longer permitted under the 2026 amendments.
Sample register entries, model resolution wording and the full 20-point compliance checklist are included in this article above. For a bespoke compliance pack tailored to your company structure, contact a qualified corporate law practitioner in Tanzania.

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Tanzania Companies Act Amendments 2026: Practical Compliance Checklist for Directors, Company Secretaries & Investors

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