Our Expert in Tanzania
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Last reviewed: 25 June 2026
Tanzania’s change of control tax rules have become one of the most consequential compliance risks facing deal teams, lenders and insolvency practitioners operating in the country. The Finance Act 2026, gazetted on 15 June 2026 and operational from 1 July 2026, clarifies and tightens the circumstances in which a shift in underlying ownership triggers an immediate deemed disposal, and with it, capital gains tax, withholding obligations and potential penalties. Section 56 of the Income Tax Act remains the statutory centrepiece, but the 2026 amendments sharpen the enforcement environment by removing ambiguities that buyers and sellers previously relied upon for comfort.
For any transaction that results in a greater‑than‑50‑per‑cent change in the underlying ownership of a Tanzanian entity, whether through a direct share sale, an indirect holding‑company transfer, a court‑ordered receivership or an internal group restructuring, the tax consequences now demand early, structured planning.
Section 56 of the Income Tax Act provides the core statutory test for change of control tax in Tanzania. The provision applies whenever there is a change in the underlying ownership of an entity and that change, whether occurring in a single transaction or through a series of connected transactions, results in a person (or group of connected persons) acquiring more than 50% of the underlying ownership of the entity. The test looks through corporate chains: it is not limited to direct share transfers in the Tanzanian target company itself, but extends to indirect changes at any level in the ownership structure.
The Income Tax Act treats a change in underlying ownership as a realisation event. When the 50% threshold is crossed, the entity is deemed to have disposed of and immediately re‑acquired each of its assets at market value. This deemed disposal mechanism ensures that latent capital gains embedded in the entity’s asset base, land, buildings, equipment, licences, goodwill, are crystallised and taxed at the moment control shifts, rather than deferred until the assets are actually sold. The Finance Act 2026 amendments reinforce the breadth of this test by clarifying that beneficial, not merely legal, ownership is the relevant measure.
Industry observers expect this to close a number of planning structures that relied on nominee arrangements or layered holding vehicles to argue that no single person had crossed the threshold.
The taxable event occurs at the point in time when the aggregate change in underlying ownership exceeds 50%. Practitioners must therefore track cumulative transfers: a 30% sale in Year 1 followed by a 25% sale in Year 3 by connected persons would cross the threshold at the moment the second tranche completes. The relevant look‑back period for aggregating connected‑party transfers requires careful analysis of the specific transaction chain. The timing question is critical because it determines the valuation date for the deemed disposal and locks in the market value at which capital gains are computed.
For multinational groups, the most significant trap lies in indirect transfers. If a Luxembourg or Mauritian holding company sells its shares in an intermediate entity that, in turn, holds more than 50% of a Tanzanian operating subsidiary, Section 56 can be triggered even though no shares in the Tanzanian company itself change hands. Deal teams must map the full ownership chain, from the ultimate beneficial owner down to the Tanzanian entity, and model the percentage shift at each level. Structures involving foreign‑owned Tanzanian companies are particularly exposed, because the Tanzanian Revenue Authority (TRA) takes an expansive view of what constitutes underlying ownership.
| Entity Type | Main Reporting / Withholding Obligation | Typical Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Tanzanian resident company (target) | Recognise capital gains on deemed disposal; report in annual return; assist buyer with information | Within the fiscal‑year filing deadline |
| Buyer (resident or non‑resident) acquiring >50% | Potential withholding agent obligation on purchase proceeds; remit to TRA | At the point of payment or within the statutory remittance period |
| Receiver / liquidator | Ensure taxes due are prioritised and withheld amounts remitted | Immediately upon realisation / per insolvency rules |
| Non‑resident seller | Taxable in Tanzania on source‑basis gains; must appoint a local agent if no permanent establishment | At disposal / within statutory return period |
Once the change of control tax trigger is crossed, several tax charges arise simultaneously. Understanding the interaction between deemed disposal, capital gains tax Tanzania obligations, withholding requirements and transfer tax Tanzania levies is essential for accurate deal modelling.
Under the deemed disposal rule, the Tanzanian entity is treated as having sold all its assets at market value on the date the ownership change occurs, and as having immediately re‑acquired those same assets at that market value. The capital gain is calculated as the difference between the market value on the trigger date and the entity’s existing cost base (historical cost, adjusted for any prior allowances and depreciation). This gain forms part of the entity’s income and is subject to corporate income tax at the prevailing rate. There is no separate “capital gains tax” regime for companies in Tanzania; gains on disposal of assets are taxed as business income under the Income Tax Act.
The practical difficulty is valuation. Market value must be determined at the exact trigger date, which requires independent appraisals of land, buildings, plant and machinery, intangible assets and goodwill. The TRA may challenge valuations that appear to understate market value, and the burden of proof rests with the taxpayer to demonstrate that the values used are arm’s length.
Where the seller is a non‑resident, the buyer (or other person making payment) typically acts as the withholding agent. The withholding tax on payments for the acquisition of assets or interests from non‑residents is remitted to the TRA. Failure to withhold exposes the buyer to personal liability for the tax, plus interest and penalties. The Finance Act 2026 amendments tighten compliance by clarifying the withholding agent’s obligations in multi‑layered structures where payment flows through intermediaries. Early indications suggest that the TRA will pursue the party closest to the Tanzanian jurisdiction, ordinarily the Tanzanian target or its local counsel, if offshore buyers fail to remit.
For asset sales (as distinct from share sales), transfer tax Tanzania obligations can arise independently of the change‑of‑control provisions. Transfers of real property attract stamp duty under the Stamp Duty Act, and VAT may apply to sales of taxable goods or services. Asset sales in the context of business acquisitions therefore require a composite analysis: capital gains on the deemed disposal, stamp duty on the conveyance of immovable property, and VAT on any taxable supplies. Deal teams structuring acquisitions through BRELA‑registered entities should map out each layer of tax before committing to a transaction structure.
Consider a scenario where Buyer Co acquires 60% of the shares in TZ Target Ltd from a non‑resident seller. TZ Target Ltd holds commercial real estate with a book value of TZS 2 billion and an independent market valuation of TZS 5 billion at the trigger date. The deemed disposal gain at the entity level is TZS 3 billion (market value of TZS 5 billion minus cost base of TZS 2 billion). This gain is included in TZ Target Ltd’s taxable income for the year and taxed at the standard corporate income tax rate. Separately, the buyer must withhold tax on the purchase price paid to the non‑resident seller and remit to the TRA within the statutory deadline.
If the total purchase price for the 60% stake is TZS 4 billion, withholding applies to that payment at the applicable non‑resident rate. The buyer should escrow sufficient funds from the purchase price to cover both the entity‑level tax on the deemed disposal and the withholding obligation.
| Transaction Type | Primary Tanzanian Tax Risk | Deal Team Action |
|---|---|---|
| Direct share sale (>50% change) | Deemed disposal triggers capital gains at entity level; withholding tax on proceeds paid to non‑resident seller | Verify historic ownership chain, obtain independent valuation, withhold and remit, escrow indemnity |
| Asset sale | VAT and transfer tax on business assets; capital gains on disposal; potential depreciation recapture | Check VAT registration status; model stamp duty; obtain TRA rulings if asset sale arises in insolvency |
| Receiver / insolvency sale | Purchaser may inherit residual tax liabilities if acquisition treated as change of control | Seek TRA clearance, include tax indemnity and tax apportionment clause in sale agreement |
| Internal group restructuring | Possible rollover relief if statutory conditions met; risk of claw‑back if conditions breached | Prepare group elections, maintain contemporaneous documentation, monitor post‑transaction compliance |
Non‑resident sellers are taxable in Tanzania on gains from the disposal of interests in Tanzanian entities on a source basis. Where a double‑taxation agreement (DTA) exists between Tanzania and the seller’s jurisdiction, the DTA may reduce or eliminate the Tanzanian taxing right, but only if the seller qualifies for treaty benefits and the interest being disposed of does not derive its value principally from immovable property in Tanzania. Most DTAs preserve the source‑country right to tax gains on interests deriving value from land. Practitioners should review the specific treaty language before assuming relief.
The deemed disposal gain is recognised in the tax year in which the change of control occurs. If the trigger date falls partway through the entity’s fiscal year, the gain is included in that year’s return and any resulting tax liability is payable in accordance with the standard instalment and final return schedule. There is no deferral mechanism available unless the transaction qualifies for rollover relief under the corporate restructuring tax Tanzania provisions discussed below.
The Income Tax Act contains limited but important reliefs for corporate restructuring tax Tanzania situations. Understanding these provisions, and their strict conditions, is essential for groups contemplating internal reorganisations.
Where a transfer of assets occurs between entities within the same group, and the transaction meets prescribed conditions, rollover relief may defer the recognition of the deemed disposal gain. The typical conditions include: (a) the transferor and transferee must be part of the same group, generally meaning common ownership of 50% or more; (b) the assets must remain within the group for a specified period following the transfer; and (c) the transaction must be for bona fide commercial purposes and not primarily tax‑motivated. Failure to satisfy any condition, including a subsequent disposal of the assets or a break‑up of the group within the look‑back period, will trigger a claw‑back of the deferred gain.
Groups with cross‑border structures should assess whether a reorganisation above the Tanzanian entity level could trigger the change of control tax Tanzania provisions at the subsidiary level. The interaction of Tanzania’s domestic rules with DTAs and controlled‑foreign‑company regimes in the parent’s jurisdiction adds a further layer of complexity. Where the restructuring involves a transfer of shares in a holding company that sits between the parent and the Tanzanian subsidiary, the indirect‑ownership test in Section 56 must be modelled at each tier.
Effective Tanzania M&A tax management starts before the heads of terms are signed. The following pre‑deal due diligence and drafting checklist reflects current practice in the post‑Finance Act 2026 environment.
Purchase agreements must allocate the change‑of‑control tax risk explicitly. The following clause types are essential:
Note: All template clause language should be reviewed and customised by local Tanzanian counsel. The above is general guidance and not a substitute for bespoke legal drafting.
Insolvency sales present a distinct set of challenges for change of control tax Tanzania compliance. Neither receivership nor court‑ordered liquidation automatically exempts a transaction from the deemed disposal provisions. When a receiver, liquidator or administrator sells the assets or shares of a distressed Tanzanian entity, and the sale results in a greater‑than‑50% change in underlying ownership, Section 56 applies in the same way as it would in a voluntary transaction.
Under Tanzanian insolvency law, tax debts generally rank as preferential claims in the distribution waterfall. The TRA has the right to claim outstanding taxes, including any tax arising from a deemed disposal triggered by the change of control, ahead of unsecured creditors. This priority creates a direct risk for buyers: if the distressed entity’s tax liabilities (including the newly crystallised deemed disposal tax) exceed the available assets, the shortfall may effectively reduce the value available to the buyer or, in certain circumstances, expose the buyer to successor liability arguments.
The tax implications of receivership in Tanzania require careful planning by both the receiver and the prospective purchaser:
Suppose a court‑appointed receiver sells 100% of the shares in Distressed Co (a Tanzanian registered company) to Acquirer Ltd. Distressed Co holds industrial land with a market value of TZS 3 billion and a cost base of TZS 800 million. The deemed disposal gain is TZS 2. 2 billion. The receiver must compute the corporate income tax on this gain, file and remit the tax from the sale proceeds before distributing the balance to secured and unsecured creditors. Acquirer Ltd, as the buyer, should ensure that sufficient funds are set aside in the completion accounts (or held in escrow by the receiver’s solicitors) to cover this liability.
If the receiver distributes proceeds without remitting the tax, the TRA may pursue the company, now under Acquirer Ltd’s control, for the unpaid amount, plus penalties and interest.
Meeting the filing and payment obligations associated with change of control tax Tanzania is non‑negotiable. Penalties for non‑compliance include interest on late payments, fixed penalties for failure to file returns and, in egregious cases, prosecution.
The deemed disposal gain must be included in the entity’s annual tax return for the year in which the change of control occurred. Withholding tax must be remitted to the TRA within the prescribed period following the payment to the non‑resident. Failure to withhold renders the paying party personally liable for the tax, plus interest calculated from the date the tax should have been remitted. The Tax Administration Act provides for significant penalties, including percentage‑based penalties on the understatement of tax and additional interest charges for late payment.
Where a taxpayer disagrees with a TRA assessment, for example, challenging the TRA’s valuation of assets on the deemed disposal, or disputing whether the 50% threshold was in fact crossed, the taxpayer may lodge an objection with the TRA within the statutory objection period. If the objection is unsuccessful, the taxpayer may appeal to the Tax Revenue Appeals Board and, subsequently, to the Tax Revenue Appeals Tribunal and the courts. The likely practical effect of the Finance Act 2026 changes will be an increase in disputes around valuations and indirect‑ownership calculations, given the broader reach of the clarified provisions.
Cross‑border payments associated with a change of control, including purchase price remittances to non‑resident sellers, must comply with Tanzania’s exchange control regulations administered by the Bank of Tanzania. Buyers and sellers should obtain any required approvals and ensure that foreign exchange remittances are properly documented to avoid delays or penalties at the central bank level.
The change of control tax Tanzania regime, as reinforced by the Finance Act 2026, demands disciplined planning at every stage of a transaction. The following eight‑point checklist provides a starting framework:
Disclaimer: This article provides general guidance on change of control tax in Tanzania and does not constitute formal legal or tax advice. Specific transactions should be assessed on their individual facts by qualified Tanzanian counsel. Readers are encouraged to seek professional advice tailored to their circumstances.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Vintan Mbiro at Breakthrough Attorneys, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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