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Beneficial Ownership Disclosures and Enforcement in Tanzania

By Ernestilla Bahati
– posted 2 hours ago

Beneficial ownership disclosures and enforcement in Tanzania have moved from a policy aspiration to an active compliance obligation that every company registered with the Business Registrations and Licensing Agency (BRELA) must now take seriously. The Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations, made under the Companies Act, 2002 (as amended), require every Tanzanian-registered entity to identify, record and file the particulars of its ultimate beneficial owners with the Registrar. BRELA’s public notice of 10 March 2025, which set a filing deadline of 15 April 2025, confirmed that the regulator is prepared to enforce these rules, and companies that have not yet complied face escalating penalties.

At Ernestilla, Mafita & Company Advocates, we have been guiding domestic and foreign-invested companies through these filings since the Regulations were first gazetted, and the volume of compliance queries I receive tells me that many businesses still underestimate the urgency of this regime.

At a Glance: Key Compliance Points

Before diving into the detail, here is a quick-reference checklist for in-house counsel and company secretaries who need to assess their exposure immediately.

  • Who must file. Every company registered under the Companies Act, private, public, and branches of foreign companies, must submit beneficial ownership information to BRELA.
  • What to disclose. Full particulars of each natural person who is an ultimate beneficial owner: name, nationality, residential address, date of birth, nature and extent of interest or control, and the date on which the person became (or ceased to be) a beneficial owner.
  • Where to file. Through the BRELA Online Registration System (ORS) portal, or by lodging the prescribed forms (Form 14b for initial filings; Form 14c for changes) with the Registrar’s office.
  • Deadline for initial filing. Companies that had not filed by 15 April 2025 are already non-compliant. New companies must file at incorporation.
  • Ongoing update obligation. Any change in beneficial ownership must be notified to BRELA within 30 days of the company becoming aware of the change.
  • Penalties. Non-compliance can attract administrative fines, and the filing of false or misleading information carries criminal exposure for directors and officers.
  • Extractive companies. Additional transparency obligations apply under the Tanzania Extractive Industries (Transparency and Accountability) Act and TEITI reporting requirements.
  • Immediate action. Conduct an internal beneficial ownership audit now, verify the accuracy of existing BRELA filings, and engage qualified legal counsel if any gaps are identified.
Milestone Date / Period
Companies Act, 2002 (as amended), beneficial ownership provisions enacted 2002 (amended subsequently)
Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations gazetted 2021
BRELA public notice demanding compliance 10 March 2025
BRELA filing deadline (per notice) 15 April 2025
Ongoing change notification window Within 30 days of any change

Why Beneficial Ownership Transparency Matters in Tanzania

Tanzania’s push for beneficial ownership transparency did not emerge in a vacuum. It sits at the intersection of three powerful policy currents: anti-money-laundering (AML) reform, extractive-sector governance, and international investor due diligence expectations.

On the AML front, Tanzania has been strengthening its regulatory architecture to align with Financial Action Task Force (FATF) recommendations, which require countries to ensure that competent authorities can obtain adequate, accurate and timely information on the beneficial ownership of legal persons. The beneficial ownership register maintained by BRELA is a direct answer to that requirement.

In the extractives sector, Tanzania’s membership of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) and the work of the Tanzania Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (TEITI) have driven a dedicated beneficial ownership roadmap. That roadmap, published in conjunction with EITI, commits the government to disclosing the beneficial owners of companies that hold or apply for extractive licences, a commitment that goes beyond the general corporate and commercial compliance obligations and adds a layer of public disclosure.

From an investor perspective, international partners increasingly treat beneficial ownership transparency as a prerequisite to deal-making. In my experience advising foreign investors entering Tanzania, a clean and up-to-date beneficial ownership filing is now as fundamental to due diligence as audited financials. The Global Financial Integrity (GFI) report on the impact of Tanzania’s beneficial ownership registry underscores this point, noting that the registry improves the investment climate by reducing opacity around ownership structures.

Legal Framework: Companies Act and the Beneficial Ownership Regulations

The legal architecture for beneficial ownership disclosures in Tanzania rests on two pillars: the Companies Act, 2002 (as amended) and the Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations, which were gazetted in 2021.

Companies Act, 2002 (as Amended)

The Companies Act provides the parent authority for the Regulations. It empowers the Registrar of Companies (operating through BRELA) to require companies to maintain and disclose information about the natural persons who ultimately own or control them. The Act also establishes the penalty framework for non-compliance and confers investigative powers on the Registrar.

Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations

The Regulations flesh out the Act’s broad mandate. Key regulatory provisions include the following:

  • Obligation to obtain and hold BO information. Every company must take reasonable steps to identify its beneficial owners, obtain the prescribed particulars, and maintain those particulars in a beneficial ownership register at its registered office.
  • Filing with the Registrar. The company must file the same particulars with BRELA using the prescribed forms, Form 14b for the initial return and Form 14c to notify changes.
  • 30-day update window. When a person ceases to be a beneficial owner, or when there is any change in the particulars previously filed, the company must notify BRELA within 30 days.
  • Accuracy and verification. Directors and company secretaries bear responsibility for the accuracy of filed information and must take reasonable steps to verify it.

The Regulations also define who qualifies as a “beneficial owner”, a definition I examine in the next section. For companies operating in the extractives sector, the Regulations work alongside the Tanzania Extractive Industries (Transparency and Accountability) Act, creating a dual disclosure obligation that is monitored by both BRELA and TEITI.

Legislative / Regulatory Instrument Key Provision Relevance
Companies Act, 2002 (as amended) Parent authority for beneficial ownership obligations; penalty framework Establishes the legal duty and enforcement powers
Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations, 2021 Filing forms, definitions, 30-day update duty, register maintenance Day-to-day compliance mechanics
Tanzania Extractive Industries (Transparency and Accountability) Act Additional disclosure for extractive licence holders Sector-specific public transparency layer
BRELA Public Notice, 10 March 2025 Mandatory filing deadline of 15 April 2025; enforcement warning Triggered active enforcement phase

Who Is a “Beneficial Owner”? Definitions and Common Scenarios

A beneficial owner, under the Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations, is the natural person who ultimately owns or controls a company, whether directly or indirectly, or on whose behalf a transaction or activity is conducted. The concept is designed to look through corporate veils, nominee arrangements, and trust structures to reach the flesh-and-blood individual who exercises real control or enjoys the economic benefit.

Control Thresholds and Indicators

The Regulations establish several indicators of beneficial ownership. A natural person will typically qualify if they:

  • Hold a significant shareholding. Ownership of a specified percentage of shares or voting rights, commonly a threshold of 25 per cent or more, is a primary indicator, though the Registrar may treat lower holdings as relevant where other control indicators are present.
  • Exercise control through other means. This includes the power to appoint or remove a majority of the board, the right to exercise significant influence over decisions, or control exercised through financing arrangements, contracts, or informal arrangements.
  • Receive the economic benefit. A person who does not appear on the share register but is entitled to receive a significant portion of the company’s income, profits, or assets may be a beneficial owner.

Common Scenarios in Practice

In my practice, the scenarios that cause the most confusion include the following:

  • Nominee shareholders. Where shares are held by a nominee, the nominator (the natural person for whom the nominee acts) is the beneficial owner, not the nominee.
  • Multi-layered corporate structures. If Company A is owned by Company B, which is in turn owned by Company C, the analysis must trace through each layer until a natural person is identified.
  • Trust arrangements. The settlor, trustee exercising discretionary control, and any named beneficiary with a vested interest may all need to be disclosed, depending on the nature of their involvement.
  • Joint ventures and consortium arrangements. Each partner or consortium member must be traced to its ultimate beneficial owners separately.

Where a company cannot identify its beneficial owners despite taking reasonable steps, the Regulations require it to file a statement to that effect and to explain the steps it has taken. This is not a safe harbour, it is a placeholder that invites further scrutiny from the Registrar.

How to Submit and Update Beneficial Ownership Information (BRELA Portal)

Filing beneficial ownership information with BRELA is a practical process, but one that requires careful preparation. In my experience, errors in initial filings, particularly around the identification of indirect owners, are the most common source of subsequent compliance problems.

Step-by-Step Filing Process

  1. Conduct an internal ownership audit. Before engaging with the BRELA portal, map the company’s full ownership chain from the share register down to each ultimate natural person. Gather certified copies of identification documents (passport or national ID), proof of residential address, and evidence of the nature and extent of each person’s interest.
  2. Access the BRELA Online Registration System (ORS). Log in using the company’s registered credentials. If the company does not yet have ORS access, the company secretary or authorised representative must register on the portal first.
  3. Complete Form 14b (initial filing). Enter the prescribed particulars for each beneficial owner: full legal name, nationality, date of birth, residential address, nature and extent of beneficial interest (e.g., percentage of shares, voting control, or other means of control), and the date on which the individual became a beneficial owner.
  4. Upload supporting documents. Attach certified copies of identification documents, corporate structure charts (for multi-layered ownership), and any declarations from nominees confirming the identity of the underlying natural person.
  5. Submit and obtain confirmation. The system will generate a confirmation receipt. Retain this receipt together with the supporting documents in the company’s records.

Updating and Correcting Filed Information

Changes in beneficial ownership, including the acquisition or disposal of a significant interest, a change in the nature of control, or the death or incapacity of a beneficial owner, must be notified to BRELA within 30 days using Form 14c. The same update obligation applies where the company becomes aware that previously filed information was inaccurate.

In practice, I advise clients to build a beneficial ownership monitoring protocol into their corporate governance calendar. This means:

  • Board-level responsibility. Assign a specific director or the company secretary as the beneficial ownership compliance officer with a standing mandate to review ownership changes at every board meeting.
  • Shareholder notification clauses. Include contractual provisions in shareholders’ agreements and share transfer instruments requiring parties to notify the company of any change that could affect beneficial ownership.
  • Annual verification. Even where no change has occurred, conduct an annual review to confirm the accuracy of the information on file with BRELA.

Special Cases: Foreign Companies and Branches

Branches of foreign companies registered in Tanzania must file the beneficial ownership details of the parent company’s ultimate natural person owners. This can be challenging where the parent company is listed on a foreign stock exchange or has a widely dispersed ownership base. In such cases, the branch should disclose all natural persons who meet the control thresholds and, where full identification is not possible, file a detailed explanation of the steps taken. This obligation mirrors the approach seen in other jurisdictions, for instance, the UBO reporting obligations applied in Spain under EU directives follow a similar “trace to the natural person” methodology.

Enforcement and Penalties: What Happens When Companies Fail to File or Submit False Information

The enforcement landscape for beneficial ownership disclosures in Tanzania has shifted decisively from passive to active. BRELA’s public notice of 10 March 2025, which directed all registered companies to file beneficial ownership information by 15 April 2025, signalled that the Registrar is prepared to take concrete enforcement action against non-compliant entities.

Administrative Penalties for Non-Filing

Companies that fail to file, or that file outside the prescribed deadlines, face administrative fines. While the exact quantum of fines is prescribed by the Regulations and may be updated by subsequent Government Notices, commentary from leading Tanzanian law firms and compliance advisers has reported fines in the range of TZS 1 million to TZS 10 million, depending on the nature and duration of the non-compliance. The Registrar also has the power to impose ongoing daily penalties for continued default, which means that the financial exposure compounds rapidly.

Criminal Exposure for False or Misleading Information

Filing false or misleading beneficial ownership information is treated far more seriously than mere late filing. Under the Companies Act and the Regulations, directors and officers who knowingly or recklessly submit false information face criminal prosecution. Convictions can result in substantial fines, imprisonment, or both. This is not a theoretical risk, in my view, the combination of BRELA’s digital records and the increasing international information-sharing arrangements (including those under the FATF framework) means that discrepancies between filed information and actual ownership structures are more likely to be detected than ever before.

Sanctions for Misuse of Beneficial Ownership Information

The Regulations also create a two-way obligation: just as companies must file accurate information, persons who obtain beneficial ownership data from the register must not misuse it. Unauthorised disclosure or commercial exploitation of beneficial ownership information can itself attract penalties.

Practical Consequences Beyond Fines

Beyond the direct statutory penalties, non-compliance with beneficial ownership disclosures in Tanzania carries significant practical consequences:

  • Due diligence failures. Prospective investors, lenders, and joint-venture partners will flag a missing or outdated beneficial ownership filing as a red flag during due diligence.
  • Regulatory friction. Companies seeking sector-specific licences, government contracts, or approvals from other regulators (such as the Bank of Tanzania or the Tanzania Revenue Authority) may find that an incomplete beneficial ownership record creates administrative delays or outright refusals.
  • Reputational damage. In an environment where extractive-sector transparency is subject to public scrutiny through TEITI and EITI, a failure to file can attract negative media attention and civil-society pressure.

What to Do If You Receive a BRELA Compliance Notice

If your company receives a compliance notice from BRELA, I recommend the following immediate steps:

  1. Do not ignore the notice, respond within any stated deadline.
  2. Conduct an urgent internal audit to identify all current beneficial owners.
  3. Prepare and file Form 14b or Form 14c (as appropriate) through the ORS portal without delay.
  4. Engage legal counsel to assess whether the company or its officers face any additional liability and to prepare a response to the Registrar if required.
  5. Document every step taken, this evidence of good faith may be relevant if the Registrar exercises discretion on penalties.

Special Sector Considerations: Extractives and Financial Services

Companies operating in Tanzania’s extractive industries, mining, oil, and gas, face an additional layer of beneficial ownership transparency requirements. Under the TEITI framework and the EITI beneficial ownership roadmap for Tanzania, companies that hold or apply for extractive licences must disclose their beneficial owners not only to BRELA but also to TEITI. This sectoral disclosure may be subject to public access, meaning that the information can be viewed by civil-society organisations, journalists, and the general public, a higher transparency standard than the general BRELA register, where public access remains more limited.

Financial institutions are also subject to parallel AML requirements under the Anti-Money Laundering Act, which requires them to conduct their own beneficial ownership due diligence on customers. This means that a company’s beneficial ownership information will often be cross-checked by its bankers independently of the BRELA register, creating a further incentive for accuracy and consistency across filings. Companies listed on the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange should note that their disclosure obligations under the Capital Markets and Securities Authority rules may overlap with, but do not replace, the BRELA filing requirement.

Compliance Checklist and Templated Timeline for Company Secretaries

The following checklist is designed for company secretaries and compliance officers who need to build a repeatable process for managing beneficial ownership obligations. I recommend that this checklist be incorporated into the company’s annual corporate governance calendar.

  1. Map the company’s full ownership chain to the level of natural persons.
  2. Identify all individuals who meet the beneficial ownership thresholds (shareholding, voting control, other forms of control, economic benefit).
  3. Collect certified copies of each beneficial owner’s identification documents and proof of address.
  4. Complete Form 14b (initial filing) or verify the accuracy of existing filings on the ORS portal.
  5. File with BRELA and retain the confirmation receipt.
  6. Establish a monitoring protocol: require internal notification of any share transfer, board appointment, or other event that could affect beneficial ownership.
  7. Include beneficial ownership notification clauses in shareholders’ agreements and transfer instruments.
  8. File Form 14c within 30 days of any change.
  9. Conduct an annual verification review, even where no change has occurred, and minute the outcome at a board meeting.
  10. Maintain a document-retention file containing all filings, confirmation receipts, supporting identification documents, and board minutes evidencing the review process.
  11. Brief the board annually on the status of compliance and any emerging regulatory developments.
  12. Engage external legal counsel for a periodic independent compliance review, at Ernestilla, Mafita & Company Advocates, we recommend this at least once every 12 months.
Action Responsible Person Timeframe Evidence to Retain
Initial BO filing (Form 14b) Company Secretary At incorporation / by BRELA deadline ORS confirmation receipt; supporting ID documents
Notify change (Form 14c) Company Secretary / BO Compliance Officer Within 30 days of change Form 14c filing receipt; evidence of change (transfer deed, board resolution)
Annual verification review Company Secretary + Board Annually (align with AGM cycle) Board minutes confirming review outcome
Independent legal compliance review External Counsel Every 12 months Compliance report and recommendations

Beneficial Ownership Obligations by Entity Type

Entity Type Filing Obligation (What to Disclose) Deadline / Typical Penalty
Domestic private company Full particulars of each natural person who is an ultimate beneficial owner, name, nationality, address, date of birth, nature and extent of interest or control, and supporting documents Initial filing via Form 14b; update changes within 30 days via Form 14c. Failure, administrative fines (reported in the range of TZS 1M–10M); criminal exposure for false filings
Branch of foreign company Beneficial ownership details of the parent company’s ultimate natural person owners; details of the local authorised representative Same filing and 30-day update obligation via BRELA. Penalties mirror domestic companies
Extractive company / licence holder All of the above, plus additional sectoral disclosure under the TEITI framework; information may be subject to public access Must comply with both BRELA and TEITI/EITI timelines. Non-compliance can also affect licence standing and attract heightened public scrutiny

For a comparative perspective on how regulatory deadline compliance works in other jurisdictions, see our coverage of the SEC’s 2026 filing deadline for beneficial ownership declarations in the Philippines.

Conclusion and Next Steps

Beneficial ownership disclosures and enforcement in Tanzania are no longer a future concern, they are a present reality with real penalties and real consequences for non-compliant companies. Every entity registered with BRELA should treat a clean and current beneficial ownership filing as a baseline governance obligation. My strong advice is to conduct an internal ownership audit without delay, verify the accuracy of your existing BRELA filings, and establish the monitoring protocols needed to stay compliant on an ongoing basis. For companies navigating complex ownership structures, cross-border parent entities, or extractive-sector obligations, qualified legal guidance is essential. You can find experienced Tanzanian corporate lawyers through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ernestilla Bahati at Ernestilla, Mafita & Company Advocates.

Sources

 

  1. RSM Global, Compliance on Submission of Beneficial Ownership
  2. EITI, Tanzania Beneficial Ownership Roadmap
  3. Global Financial Integrity, Impact of Beneficial Ownership Registry on the Extractives Sector in Tanzania
  4. Afriwise, 90 Days to Disclose Beneficial Ownership
  5. RSM Global, Beneficial Ownership Regulations Published

FAQs

What happens if a company does not submit beneficial ownership information?
A company that fails to submit its beneficial ownership filing faces administrative fines from BRELA, with reported penalties ranging from TZS 1 million to TZS 10 million. Continued non-compliance can attract daily penalties and may trigger regulatory complications affecting licences, banking relationships, and investor confidence.
Fines for non-filing have been reported in the range of TZS 1 million to TZS 10 million under the Companies (Beneficial Ownership) Regulations. The exact amount depends on the nature and duration of the default, and daily penalties may accrue for continued non-compliance.
File using the BRELA Online Registration System (ORS) portal. Use Form 14b for initial filings and Form 14c for updates. You must submit the prescribed particulars (name, nationality, address, nature of interest) and upload certified copies of identification documents. Changes must be notified within 30 days.
A beneficial owner is the natural person who ultimately owns or controls a company, whether directly (e.g., through shareholding above the prescribed threshold) or indirectly (e.g., through nominee arrangements, trusts, or multi-layered corporate structures). The analysis always traces through to a real human being.
The Regulations apply broadly to all companies registered under the Companies Act. There is no blanket exemption for small companies, dormant companies, or single-member entities. Companies listed on a recognised stock exchange may benefit from reduced disclosure requirements where their ownership is already subject to securities-market transparency rules, but they must still file with BRELA.
Knowingly filing false or misleading information exposes the directors and officers responsible to criminal prosecution under the Companies Act. Convictions can result in significant fines, imprisonment, or both. The company itself may also face administrative sanctions.
Access to the general BRELA beneficial ownership register is currently limited, it is primarily available to competent authorities and regulators rather than the general public. However, in the extractives sector, beneficial ownership information disclosed through the TEITI framework is subject to broader public access in line with EITI standards. The policy debate around expanding public access to the full register is ongoing.

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Beneficial Ownership Disclosures and Enforcement in Tanzania

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