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revenue tribunal rules mauritius

Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026, What Businesses in Mauritius Must Know

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The revenue tribunal rules Mauritius framework underwent its most significant overhaul in decades when the Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026 (GN No. 2 of 2026) came into force on 5 January 2026, replacing the former Assessment Review Committee procedures with a specialist tribunal system designed to accelerate tax dispute resolution Mauritius businesses have long needed. The new Rules introduce structured case-management conferences, formal mediation pathways, tighter filing deadlines and clearer evidential standards, changes that directly affect how in-house counsel, CFOs, tax advisers and insolvency practitioners prepare for and conduct revenue disputes. This guide distils the official government texts and leading practitioner commentary into a single, actionable playbook covering jurisdiction, procedure, enforcement and the critical intersection with insolvency law.

If you only read one thing, three immediate actions:

  • Audit your current disputes. Identify every open or pending MRA assessment that may now fall under Revenue Tribunal jurisdiction and confirm the applicable filing deadline.
  • Review your ADR strategy. The Rules formally encourage mediation before hearing, assess whether early engagement could reduce cost and exposure.
  • Brief your insolvency and restructuring team. Tax claims in liquidation or receivership are directly affected by Tribunal decisions; update your proof-of-debt procedures accordingly.

Background and Key Legislative Dates Under the Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026

Understanding the current framework requires tracing a clear legislative timeline. Mauritius historically resolved tax disputes through the Assessment Review Committee (ARC), a body that operated under the Mauritius Revenue Authority Act. While the ARC served its purpose for routine objections, practitioners and taxpayers increasingly criticised its limited procedural toolbox, lack of formal case-management powers and the absence of structured ADR mechanisms.

The Government of Mauritius responded with the Revenue Tribunal Act 2025, which was gazetted on 7 July 2025 and established the Revenue Tribunal as a dedicated, specialist forum for statutory tax appeals. The Act created the Tribunal’s constitutional authority, defined its jurisdiction and empowered the Minister of Finance to make subsidiary rules governing procedure. Those subsidiary rules, the Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026, were published as Government Notice No. 2 of 2026 by the Ministry of Finance, Economic Planning and Development and took effect on 5 January 2026.

Date Instrument Practical effect
7 July 2025 Revenue Tribunal Act 2025 gazetted Created the Revenue Tribunal; defined jurisdiction over statutory tax appeals; empowered subsidiary rule-making
January 2026 Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026 (GN No. 2 of 2026) published Set procedural framework: filing forms, deadlines, case-management conferences, mediation/ADR pathways, evidence standards
5 January 2026 Rules come into force All new statutory tax appeals must follow the 2026 procedure; ARC procedures no longer apply to qualifying disputes

Industry observers expect the transition to produce measurable efficiency gains within the first twelve to eighteen months, particularly for medium-complexity corporate assessments that previously languished in the ARC pipeline. The likely practical effect is a shift toward earlier, more structured engagement between taxpayers and the Mauritius Revenue Authority (MRA).

Jurisdiction and Scope, Which Disputes Belong Before the Revenue Tribunal in Mauritius?

The Revenue Tribunal Act 2025 defines the Tribunal’s jurisdiction in terms of statutory tax appeals, that is, disputes arising from assessments, penalties and interest determinations issued by the MRA under the relevant revenue legislation. This covers income tax, VAT, customs duties and other charges administered by the MRA, provided the taxpayer has exhausted (or is exempt from) the objection stage at MRA level.

Critically, the Tribunal does not replace the courts for all tax-related matters. Judicial review of Tribunal decisions remains with the Supreme Court. Purely contractual or commercial disputes, even those with tax implications, continue to be resolved through the civil courts or, where the parties have agreed, through arbitration. This distinction is vital for businesses operating in sectors such as financial services, global business licensing and cross-border trade, where a single transaction may generate both a statutory tax dispute and a contractual claim.

Revenue Tribunal Mauritius vs Courts, Key Boundaries

The statutory dividing line is straightforward in principle but can be nuanced in practice. The Revenue Tribunal has exclusive jurisdiction over appeals against MRA assessments and penalty decisions that are specifically channelled to it by the Revenue Tribunal Act 2025. The Supreme Court retains its supervisory jurisdiction through judicial review and hears appeals from Tribunal decisions on points of law. The Commercial Division of the Supreme Court continues to handle contractual, insolvency and enforcement matters that do not fall within the Tribunal’s statutory mandate.

Practitioners should note that where a single set of facts gives rise to both a statutory assessment (e.g., a disputed customs valuation) and a contractual claim (e.g., an indemnity against a supplier), it may be necessary to pursue parallel proceedings: the assessment appeal before the Tribunal and the contractual claim before the courts or an arbitral tribunal.

When Arbitration Trumps the Revenue Tribunal, Arbitration vs Tribunal Mauritius

Arbitration cannot override the Revenue Tribunal’s statutory jurisdiction. A taxpayer cannot agree with the MRA to refer an assessment dispute to arbitration; that dispute must go to the Tribunal. However, where a commercial contract contains an arbitration clause and one party’s liability to the other depends on the tax treatment of the underlying transaction, the arbitration will proceed in parallel. The Tribunal’s determination of the tax assessment may then serve as a factual input to the arbitral award, but the arbitral tribunal cannot revisit the statutory assessment itself.

Early indications suggest that the clearest use-case for parallel proceedings arises in share-purchase agreements, joint-venture disputes and transfer-pricing controversies where both private-law obligations and MRA assessments are in play.

Procedural Changes Under the Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026, Filing, Timelines and Case Management

The revenue tribunal rules 2026 introduce a structured procedural pathway that replaces the comparatively informal ARC process. Every appeal now follows a prescribed sequence: filing of the notice of appeal, service on the MRA, case-management conference, potential ADR referral, disclosure and evidence exchange, and hearing.

Step-by-Step Filing Process

  1. Prepare the notice of appeal. Use the Tribunal’s prescribed form, identifying the assessment under challenge, the grounds of appeal and the relief sought. The form is available from the Revenue Tribunal portal.
  2. File within the statutory deadline. The Revenue Tribunal Act 2025 sets the time limit for lodging an appeal; the Rules confirm the procedural mechanics. Late filing may result in the appeal being struck out unless the Tribunal grants an extension on cause shown.
  3. Serve the MRA. A copy of the notice of appeal must be served on the MRA within the period prescribed by the Rules. Proof of service must be filed with the Tribunal.
  4. Pay any prescribed fees. Where the Rules prescribe a filing fee, payment must accompany the notice of appeal.
  5. Attend the case-management conference. The Tribunal will schedule a conference to set directions for the conduct of the appeal, including disclosure timelines, witness-statement deadlines and any ADR referral.

Sample Timeline, Standard Audit Assessment Appeal

Stage Indicative timeframe Action required
MRA issues assessment Day 0 Review assessment; instruct tax adviser
Lodge objection with MRA Within statutory period File formal objection
MRA determines objection Varies Await MRA decision
File notice of appeal to Tribunal Within statutory deadline from MRA determination Prepare and file prescribed form; serve MRA
Case-management conference Scheduled by Tribunal (typically within weeks of filing) Attend; propose directions; raise ADR
Disclosure and evidence exchange Per Tribunal directions Exchange witness statements, expert reports, documents
Mediation window (if applicable) As directed Engage in mediation; report outcome to Tribunal
Hearing As listed Present case; oral submissions
Decision Reserved or delivered at hearing Comply with decision or consider appeal

Mediation and ADR Pathways, Mediation Mauritius Obligations Under the Rules

The revenue tribunal rules Mauritius framework formally encourages mediation and alternative dispute resolution before matters proceed to a full hearing. The Rules create a dedicated case-management stage at which the Tribunal may refer the parties to mediation or another form of ADR, and they empower the Tribunal to take into account a party’s unreasonable refusal to engage with ADR when making costs or procedural directions.

This is not a strict mandate, the Rules do not make mediation a precondition to hearing in all cases, but the practical signal is clear: parties that refuse to engage with mediation without good reason may face adverse consequences. For businesses, this means building ADR readiness into the appeal strategy from day one.

Mediation readiness checklist for counsel:

  • Authority to settle. Confirm that the individual attending mediation has authority to agree a binding settlement within defined parameters.
  • Position paper. Prepare a concise mediation statement summarising the facts, the law, the quantum in dispute and the preferred outcome.
  • Documents. Assemble the core evidential bundle, assessments, objection correspondence, financial statements and any expert reports.
  • Timing. Engage early; the case-management conference is the last natural trigger point before the Tribunal may direct mediation.
  • Confidentiality. Confirm that mediation communications will remain without-prejudice and inadmissible in subsequent Tribunal proceedings.

Practical Pre-Filing Checklist for Businesses and In-House Teams

Before filing an appeal under the revenue tribunal rules Mauritius, in-house teams should conduct a structured internal review. The following checklist is designed for CFOs and general counsel managing the intersection of tax risk and commercial operations.

  1. Internal governance sign-off. Obtain board or audit-committee approval for the appeal, including a delegated authority for settlement and a litigation budget.
  2. Tax accounting impact. Assess whether the disputed assessment requires a provision, contingent liability disclosure or adjustment in the financial statements under IFRS.
  3. Document audit. Identify all contemporaneous documents relevant to the assessment: contracts, invoices, transfer-pricing studies, correspondence with MRA, board minutes and accounting workpapers.
  4. Provisional payment analysis. Determine whether any portion of the assessed tax must be paid or secured pending the appeal, and assess the cash-flow impact.
  5. Witness availability. Confirm that key personnel (finance director, tax manager, deal team members) are available to provide witness statements and attend hearings.
  6. Expert engagement. For complex matters (transfer pricing, customs valuation, financial-services tax), engage an independent expert early.
  7. ADR strategy. Brief external counsel on mediation readiness and settlement authority before the case-management conference.

Red Flags That Suggest Early Settlement or Mediation Is Recommended

  • Weak factual record. If the contemporaneous documentation is thin, settlement may reduce exposure more effectively than a contested hearing.
  • Reputational sensitivity. For listed companies, GBL holders and regulated entities, a public Tribunal hearing may carry reputational risk that mediation avoids.
  • Quantum disproportionate to cost. Where the disputed tax is modest relative to the legal and management costs of a full appeal, early resolution is commercially rational.
  • Ongoing relationship with MRA. Entities with complex, continuing compliance obligations (large corporate groups, financial institutions) may benefit from maintaining a cooperative relationship through mediation rather than adversarial proceedings.

Documentation by Entity Type

Entity type Key documents to prepare Typical preparation timeline
Domestic corporate (manufacturing, services) Tax returns, financial statements, MRA assessment and objection correspondence, contracts, invoices, board minutes 2–4 weeks
GBL / Global Business Company All of the above plus substance evidence (local employees, board meeting records, decision-making documentation), transfer-pricing studies, economic substance declarations 4–6 weeks
Financial institution (bank, insurer, fund) All of the above plus regulatory correspondence, compliance reports, risk-weighted-asset calculations (where relevant to VAT or withholding-tax disputes) 4–8 weeks

Evidence, Disclosure and Hearing Preparation Under the Revenue Tribunal Rules Mauritius

The Rules impose structured disclosure and evidence-management obligations that represent a significant procedural upgrade from the former ARC system. At the case-management conference, the Tribunal will issue directions specifying the form, scope and timeline for disclosure of documents, the exchange of witness statements and the filing of any expert reports.

Core evidence categories:

  • Contemporaneous documents. Contracts, invoices, bank statements, accounting records and correspondence that were created at or around the time of the transactions under assessment.
  • Witness statements. Written statements of fact from individuals with direct knowledge of the relevant transactions, typically filed in advance of the hearing.
  • Expert reports. Where the dispute involves technical valuation, transfer-pricing methodology or industry-specific accounting treatment, the Tribunal may direct the filing of expert evidence.
  • Electronic evidence. Emails, messaging records, ERP system extracts and other digital records may be disclosable; ensure your IT team can produce these in an admissible format.

Common Evidential Objections and How the Tribunal Rules Handle Them

The Rules give the Tribunal broad discretion to admit or exclude evidence based on relevance, reliability and proportionality. Common objections include challenges to the authenticity of electronic records, late-served evidence and hearsay. The Tribunal is empowered to impose conditions on the admission of late evidence, for example, requiring the party seeking to rely on it to bear the costs of any adjournment. Practitioners should therefore front-load their evidence preparation and serve documents within the timeframes directed at the case-management conference.

Template list of documents to serve:

  1. Notice of appeal and all filed pleadings
  2. MRA assessment notice and objection determination
  3. All objection correspondence with MRA
  4. Relevant contracts and transaction documents
  5. Financial statements for the periods under assessment
  6. Tax returns and computations
  7. Transfer-pricing studies or comparable analyses (where applicable)
  8. Witness statements from fact witnesses
  9. Expert report(s) (where directed)
  10. Bundle index and agreed chronology

Enforcement of Tribunal Decisions, Appeals and Insolvency Interplay

Tribunal decisions carry the force specified by the Revenue Tribunal Act 2025. Once the Tribunal issues a determination, whether upholding, varying or setting aside an MRA assessment, the decision is binding on the parties and enforceable through the mechanisms prescribed by the Act and the Rules. The MRA is required to give effect to the Tribunal’s determination, adjusting assessments and any related penalties or interest accordingly.

Appeals from Tribunal decisions lie to the Supreme Court on points of law. A party wishing to appeal must file within the statutory appeal period. The Tribunal or the Supreme Court may grant a stay of the Tribunal’s decision pending appeal, provided the applicant demonstrates grounds, such as a serious question of law and the balance of convenience favouring a stay.

Insolvency Tax Claims Mauritius, Practical Steps for Insolvency Practitioners

The intersection of the revenue tribunal rules Mauritius with insolvency law creates specific obligations for liquidators, receivers and creditors. Tax claims by the MRA retain their statutory priority under Mauritius insolvency legislation (the Insolvency Act 2009 and related provisions). However, the existence of a Tribunal appeal may complicate the proof-of-debt and distribution process.

  • File proofs promptly. The MRA will file a proof of debt in the insolvency for any assessed tax. Insolvency practitioners should verify the amounts claimed against the Tribunal record and challenge or admit the proof accordingly.
  • Consider stays. If the company (or its directors on its behalf) is pursuing a Tribunal appeal against the assessed amounts, the practitioner should consider whether a stay of distribution pending the Tribunal outcome is appropriate.
  • Set-off. Where the insolvent company has refund claims or overpayments against the MRA, practitioners should investigate whether set-off is available, the Tribunal’s determination on any contested amounts will be determinative.
  • Coordinate timelines. Insolvency distribution timelines and Tribunal hearing dates must be actively managed to avoid distributing funds that may be required to meet a subsequently confirmed tax liability.

Comparison, Arbitration vs Revenue Tribunal vs Courts in Mauritius

Forum When appropriate Practical pros and cons
Revenue Tribunal Statutory tax appeals: disputes over MRA assessments, penalties and interest under the Revenue Tribunal Act 2025 Pros: specialist bench with tax expertise; structured case management; formal mediation pathway; faster resolution than courts. Cons: jurisdiction limited to statutory tax appeals; limited remedies compared to courts; ADR engagement expected.
Arbitration Contractual and commercial disputes where parties have agreed to arbitrate, including tax-sensitive transactions such as share-purchase agreements, JVs and licensing arrangements Pros: party autonomy over procedure and tribunal composition; confidentiality; international enforceability under the New York Convention. Cons: cannot override statutory jurisdiction of the Revenue Tribunal; arbitral tribunal lacks power to revisit MRA assessments; costs may be higher for domestic disputes.
Courts (Supreme Court / Commercial Division) Judicial review of Tribunal decisions; enforcement of Tribunal orders; contractual claims, insolvency and matters outside Tribunal jurisdiction Pros: full range of remedies (injunctions, declarations, damages); appellate oversight of Tribunal; enforcement powers. Cons: longer timelines; higher costs; potential appeals backlog; less tax-specialist expertise at first instance.

Recommended Action Plan, Quick Checklist for In-House Counsel and CFOs

The revenue tribunal rules Mauritius require a proactive, structured response from every business with current or potential tax exposures. The following ten-point checklist provides a practical starting framework.

  1. Map all open MRA disputes and confirm which fall under Revenue Tribunal jurisdiction.
  2. Verify filing deadlines for each pending or anticipated appeal.
  3. Brief external counsel with expertise in Tribunal procedure and ADR.
  4. Establish a litigation budget and obtain board or audit-committee approval.
  5. Assess provisional payment obligations and cash-flow impact.
  6. Prepare your evidence bundle early, contemporaneous documents, witness availability and expert requirements.
  7. Develop a mediation strategy before the case-management conference, including settlement authority and a position paper.
  8. Update financial-statement disclosures for any contingent liabilities or provisions arising from the appeal.
  9. Coordinate with insolvency practitioners if the business is in or approaching financial difficulty.
  10. Monitor Tribunal practice directions and published decisions via the official Revenue Tribunal portal at rt.govmu.org as the Tribunal’s case law develops.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mushtaq Namdarkhan at BLC Roberts & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Finance, Economic Planning & Development, The Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026 (PDF)
  2. Mauritius Revenue Authority, RevTribRules26 (GN No. 2 of 2026) (PDF)
  3. Revenue Tribunal, Official Portal
  4. Laws of Mauritius, Revenue Tribunal Act 2025
  5. Andersen in Mauritius, Revenue Tribunal Act 2025 Analysis (PDF)
  6. Forvis Mazars, Revenue Appeal Tribunal (Tax Insights)
  7. Regan van Rooy, Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026

FAQs

Q: What are the Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026 and when did they take effect?
The Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026 (GN No. 2 of 2026) are the procedural rules governing appeals before the Revenue Tribunal established by the Revenue Tribunal Act 2025. They were published by the Ministry of Finance, Economic Planning and Development and came into force on 5 January 2026, replacing the former Assessment Review Committee procedures for qualifying statutory tax appeals.
The Tribunal hears statutory tax appeals as defined by the Revenue Tribunal Act 2025, primarily disputes over assessments, penalties and interest issued by the MRA. Purely contractual or commercial disputes, even where they involve tax consequences, are resolved through the courts or arbitration. Judicial review of Tribunal decisions remains with the Supreme Court.
The Rules formally encourage mediation and ADR. At the case-management conference, the Tribunal may refer parties to mediation and can take into account an unreasonable refusal to engage with ADR when giving procedural or costs directions. Mediation is not a strict precondition to a hearing in all cases, but parties that decline without good reason risk adverse consequences.
File a notice of appeal using the Tribunal’s prescribed form within the statutory deadline set by the Revenue Tribunal Act 2025. Serve a copy on the MRA, pay any prescribed fee, and file proof of service with the Tribunal. Forms and operational guidance are available on the Revenue Tribunal portal at rt.govmu.org.
Yes. Tribunal decisions are binding and the MRA must give effect to them. Appeals lie to the Supreme Court on points of law within the statutory appeal period. Either the Tribunal or the Supreme Court may grant a stay of the decision pending appeal where grounds are established.
Tax claims by the MRA retain statutory priority under Mauritius insolvency legislation. The Tribunal’s determination of any disputed assessment directly affects the proof of debt and distribution. Insolvency practitioners should verify MRA proofs against the Tribunal record, consider stays pending appeals, and actively manage distribution timelines to avoid premature payments on contested claims.

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Revenue Tribunal Rules 2026, What Businesses in Mauritius Must Know

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