[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to file provisional tax in zambia 2026

How to File Provisional Tax in Zambia 2026, Calculate, Pay and File (step-by-step)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Updated 7 July 2026 to reflect Finance Act 2026 and ZRA notices.

Understanding how to file provisional tax in Zambia 2026 is essential for every business owner, sole proprietor and finance manager whose income falls outside the PAYE system. Provisional tax in Zambia is a mechanism under the Income Tax Act that requires qualifying taxpayers to estimate their annual tax liability and pay it in quarterly instalments to the Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) during the charge year, rather than in a single lump sum after assessment. The 2026 Budget and accompanying Finance Act 2026 introduced amendments to thresholds, administrative expectations and penalty provisions that directly affect who must file, when they must pay, and how much interest accrues on late or under-estimated payments.

This guide walks through every stage of the provisional tax calculation and filing process, from eligibility checks to worked numerical examples, ZRA portal steps, payment channels, key deadlines and common pitfalls, so that you can comply fully and on time.

Overview of Provisional Tax in Zambia and Who It Applies To

Provisional tax in Zambia is not a separate tax. It is a prepayment mechanism for income tax, governed by the Income Tax Act (as amended by the Finance Act 2026). The purpose is to spread a taxpayer’s annual income-tax liability across the charge year in quarterly instalments, improving cash-flow management for both the taxpayer and the government.

The charge year in Zambia runs from 1 January to 31 December. During this period, taxpayers who meet the eligibility criteria must estimate their taxable profit, calculate the tax due, divide that amount into instalments, and file a provisional tax return with ZRA for each quarter. At the end of the charge year, ZRA issues a final assessment. If the provisional payments fall short of the actual liability, the taxpayer pays the difference plus any applicable interest. If provisional payments exceed the final liability, the overpayment is either carried forward as a credit or refunded.

The 2026 Budget introduced several changes that affect this process, including adjustments to the turnover threshold that determines who must file, updated administrative requirements on the ZRA e-services portal, and revised penalty provisions. These changes are discussed in detail in the dedicated section below on 2026 amendments.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Provisional Tax in Zambia

Not every taxpayer in Zambia is required to file provisional tax returns. The obligation applies to taxpayers whose income is not fully covered by the Pay-As-You-Earn (PAYE) system. In practical terms, provisional tax targets business profits, self-employment income, rental income, and other non-employment sources of assessable income. Salaried employees whose entire tax liability is settled through employer PAYE deductions are generally excluded.

Who Must Register and File

The following categories of taxpayers are required to file and pay provisional tax in Zambia:

  • Companies and corporations. All registered companies carrying on business in Zambia, whether incorporated locally or operating through a branch, must file provisional returns if they have taxable income.
  • Sole proprietors and self-employed individuals. Individuals earning business or professional income above the statutory threshold must file. The ZRA has referenced a gross turnover threshold of K800,000 per annum as the point at which provisional tax obligations crystallise. Taxpayers should confirm the current threshold on the ZRA Tax Information page, as the Finance Act 2026 may have adjusted this figure.
  • Partnerships. While partnerships are transparent for income tax purposes, each partner with assessable income above the threshold must file individually.
  • Non-resident entities. Foreign companies and individuals with a taxable presence (permanent establishment) in Zambia must obtain a Taxpayer Identification Number (TPIN), appoint a local tax representative, and comply with the same provisional filing requirements.

Before filing, every taxpayer must hold a valid TPIN issued by ZRA. The TPIN is the alphanumeric identifier required on all returns, payments and correspondence. Taxpayers who do not yet have a TPIN should register through the ZRA e-services portal. Registration requires a company registration certificate (issued by the Patents and Companies Registration Agency) or a national identity document for individuals, along with supporting registration forms completed online.

Taxpayers must also have active access to the ZRA e-services portal (sometimes referred to as the TaxonApp platform), which is the primary channel for submitting provisional returns electronically. Manual submissions may still be accepted in limited circumstances, but ZRA strongly encourages, and in practice expects, electronic filing.

How to File Provisional Tax in Zambia 2026: Step-by-Step Procedure

The following numbered steps set out the complete provisional tax calculation and filing process. Each step identifies who is responsible, what forms or data are needed, and practical tips for getting it right.

Step Who does it Typical duration
Estimate taxable income and calculate instalment Tax manager / Accountant 1–3 days
Complete provisional tax return in ZRA portal Tax manager / Accountant 30–60 minutes
Make payment (online / bank) Finance team / Treasurer Same day (bank clearing 1–3 days)
Upload payment proof and keep receipts Tax manager / Accountant 15–30 minutes
Adjust / top-up payment after final assessment (if required) Accountant / Tax advisor 1–2 weeks (post-assessment)

Step 1, Gather Accounting Data and Confirm the Tax Year

Compile your management accounts, trial balance and supporting schedules for the charge year (1 January – 31 December 2026). Verify all revenue streams, cost of sales, operating expenses, capital allowances and any prior-year losses carried forward. The accuracy of your provisional tax calculation depends entirely on the quality of these underlying records. Ensure that your accounting basis (accrual or cash, as applicable) is consistent with prior periods and compliant with the Income Tax Act.

Step 2, Estimate Taxable Income for the Charge Year

Provisional tax calculation in Zambia starts with a reasonable estimate of your total taxable profit for the full charge year. The formula is:

Estimated taxable profit = Estimated assessable income − Allowable deductions − Capital allowances

Assessable income includes all business revenue, rental income, investment income and any other income chargeable under the Income Tax Act. Allowable deductions cover ordinary business expenses incurred wholly and exclusively for the purpose of producing that income. Capital allowances, including wear-and-tear deductions on qualifying assets, should be calculated in line with the rates prescribed in the Income Tax Act.

There are two broad approaches to forming the estimate. A conservative approach uses prior-year actual figures as a baseline, adjusted for known changes in turnover, costs or contracts. This reduces the risk of underpayment penalties. A best-estimate approach incorporates current-year management accounts and revenue projections, which may produce a more accurate figure but carries a higher risk of under-estimation if projections prove optimistic. Industry observers expect ZRA to scrutinise estimates that are significantly lower than prior-year actual profits, so taxpayers should document the basis for any material downward revision.

Step 3, Apply the Provisional Tax Rate

Once you have estimated taxable profit, apply the applicable income tax rate to arrive at the total provisional tax liability for the year. The standard corporate income tax rate in Zambia is 30% for most companies. Different rates apply to specific sectors, for example, farming, mining and certain manufacturing activities may attract different rates under the Income Tax Act as amended by the Finance Act 2026. Individual taxpayers and sole proprietors apply the graduated personal income tax bands to their estimated business profit.

The total provisional tax liability is then divided into quarterly instalments. In the standard provisional tax schedule, each instalment represents 25% of the estimated annual liability, payable by the quarterly due dates set by ZRA. Taxpayers should confirm whether ZRA’s 2026 schedule requires equal quarterly splits or a different allocation, the ZRA Payment Due Dates page publishes the authoritative schedule each charge year.

Step 4, Calculate Instalment Amounts (Worked Provisional Tax Examples)

The following three provisional tax examples illustrate the calculation for different taxpayer profiles. All figures use Zambian Kwacha (K).

Example A, Small company (retail)

  • Estimated assessable income: K2,000,000
  • Allowable deductions (costs of sales, operating expenses): K1,400,000
  • Capital allowances: K100,000
  • Estimated taxable profit: K2,000,000 − K1,400,000 − K100,000 = K500,000
  • Corporate tax at 30%: K500,000 × 0.30 = K150,000
  • Quarterly instalment: K150,000 ÷ 4 = K37,500 per quarter

Example B, Medium SME (manufacturing)

  • Estimated assessable income: K8,500,000
  • Allowable deductions: K5,800,000
  • Capital allowances: K700,000
  • Estimated taxable profit: K8,500,000 − K5,800,000 − K700,000 = K2,000,000
  • Corporate tax at 30%: K2,000,000 × 0.30 = K600,000
  • Quarterly instalment: K600,000 ÷ 4 = K150,000 per quarter

Example C, Sole proprietor (consulting)

  • Estimated assessable income: K1,200,000
  • Allowable deductions: K350,000
  • Capital allowances: K50,000
  • Estimated taxable profit: K1,200,000 − K350,000 − K50,000 = K800,000
  • Personal income tax: apply graduated bands. The tax payable will vary depending on the specific band rates in force for 2026 as set out in the Income Tax Act and Finance Act 2026. Taxpayers should calculate tax on K800,000 using the current published bands and then divide the result into four equal quarterly instalments.

For convenience, a downloadable provisional tax calculator spreadsheet (Excel) is available, see the companion article on provisional tax worked examples for the download link and step-by-step spreadsheet instructions.

Step 5, Complete the ZRA Provisional Tax Return Form

Log in to the ZRA e-services portal using your TPIN and password. Navigate to the provisional income tax return section. Complete the following key fields:

  1. Enter your TPIN and confirm the charge year (2026).
  2. Input your estimated taxable income for the full year.
  3. Enter the instalment amount being declared for the current quarter.
  4. Attach your calculation worksheet (signed spreadsheet or PDF) as supporting evidence.
  5. Review and submit the return electronically.

The portal generates a submission acknowledgement with a reference number. Save or print this acknowledgement, it serves as your proof of filing.

Step 6, Make Payment Through Approved Channels

After submitting the return, pay the instalment amount through one of ZRA’s approved provisional tax payment channels:

  • Online banking. Use the ZRA collection account codes provided on the portal. Reference your payment with your TPIN and the tax type code for provisional income tax.
  • Bank branch deposit. Present the ZRA payment slip (generated from the portal) at any designated commercial bank branch. Ensure the teller records your TPIN and provisional tax reference correctly.
  • Mobile money / electronic payment. Where ZRA has approved mobile-money or third-party payment providers, follow the prompts using your TPIN as the reference.

Always confirm that the payment reference includes your TPIN and the correct tax type code for provisional income tax. Incorrect references are a leading cause of unallocated payments and can trigger ZRA follow-up notices.

Step 7, Upload Payment Proof, Retain Receipts and Adjust After Assessment

Upload your bank payment receipt or e-payment confirmation to the ZRA portal against the relevant return. Retain all receipts and calculation worksheets for a minimum of five years, ZRA may request them during an audit or assessment review. After the charge year ends and ZRA issues a final assessment, compare total provisional payments against the assessed liability. If you have underpaid, make a top-up payment promptly to minimise interest. If you have overpaid, apply for a credit carry-forward or refund through ZRA.

Documents Needed for Provisional Tax Filing in Zambia

Assembling the correct documents before you begin the filing process avoids delays and errors. The table below lists every document and piece of information required.

Document Notes
TPIN (Taxpayer Identification Number) Issued by ZRA, alphanumeric; required on all submissions and payments
Company registration certificate / National ID Issued by Patents and Companies Registration Agency (companies) or National Registry (individuals), PDF or scan
Management accounts / trial balance Prepared by accountant for the relevant period, Excel or PDF; supports estimated taxable income
PAYE records (if applicable) Employer PAYE deduction schedules, used to exclude emoluments already covered by PAYE
Bank payment receipt / e-payment confirmation Issued by ZRA payment channel or bank, retain for a minimum of 5 years
Signed calculation worksheets Internally prepared spreadsheets showing the basis for the taxable income estimate, save with version control
Power of Attorney / tax agent authorisation Required if a tax agent files on the taxpayer’s behalf, signed by a company director, current and scanned

Ensure all documents are current, legible and properly referenced to the charge year. Missing or outdated documentation is a common cause of ZRA queries and processing delays.

Provisional Tax Deadlines 2026, Timeline and Key Dates

Provisional tax in Zambia is payable in quarterly instalments. The filing due date (when the return must be submitted) and the payment due date (when the instalment must be received by ZRA) are distinct. The table below sets out the standard 2026 provisional tax deadlines as published by ZRA.

Instalment Filing cut-off (return) Payment due (on or before)
1st instalment (Q1), 2026 charge year 31 March 2026 10 April 2026
2nd instalment (Q2) 30 June 2026 10 July 2026
3rd instalment (Q3) 30 September 2026 10 October 2026
4th instalment (Q4 / final) 31 December 2026 10 January 2027

Taxpayers should note several practical points about these provisional tax deadlines 2026. First, the payment due date is typically 10 days after the filing cut-off, this gives you a narrow window, so it is advisable to submit the return and make payment on the same day wherever possible. Second, bank clearing times (especially for branch deposits) can take 1–3 business days; initiate payment early enough to ensure ZRA receives cleared funds by the deadline. Third, manual return submissions, where still accepted, may have earlier cut-off dates, confirm with your local ZRA office.

ZRA actively reminds taxpayers of approaching deadlines through its official social-media channels (Facebook, LinkedIn) and through the “Tax Chat” webinar series. The March 2026 edition of Tax Chat specifically addressed provisional income tax filing procedures and deadlines. Monitoring these ZRA communications helps avoid surprises.

Costs, Penalties and Tax Considerations

Filing provisional tax itself carries no government filing fee. However, late filing and underpayment attract significant penalties for underpayment and interest charges under the Income Tax Act.

Item Amount Notes
Interest on underpayment Statutory rate per the Income Tax Act / Finance Act 2026 Calculated from the due date to the date of actual payment, confirm the current statutory rate on the ZRA website
Late-filing penalty Penalty per month or part-month of default (as prescribed by the Finance Act 2026) Accrues from the day after the filing deadline, confirm the exact amount on ZRA’s official penalties schedule
Banking / collection charges Varies by bank or payment channel Borne by the taxpayer; retain bank receipt as proof
Professional fees (accountant / tax agent) Varies Budget for preparation, review and filing, costs increase for complex adjustments or appeals

Provisional payments are payments on account of the final income tax liability. The final liability is determined only after ZRA issues an assessment following the end of the charge year. Overpayments may be carried forward as a credit against future liabilities or refunded on application to ZRA. Where a taxpayer also has PAYE or withholding-tax obligations, those amounts are credited against the final assessment alongside provisional payments, avoiding double taxation.

What Changes in 2026, Finance Act and Budget Amendments Affecting Provisional Tax

The Finance Act 2026, enacted to give effect to the 2026 National Budget, introduced several amendments with direct consequences for provisional tax filers in Zambia. The key changes that practitioners and taxpayers should note include the following:

  • Turnover threshold adjustments. The threshold determining who must file provisional tax has been reviewed as part of the 2026 Budget measures. Taxpayers whose gross turnover was previously below the threshold should check whether they now fall within scope. The authoritative threshold is published on the ZRA Tax Information page and in the Finance Act 2026 schedules.
  • Revised penalty and interest provisions. The Finance Act 2026 updated the penalty framework for late filing and underpayment. The likely practical effect is stricter enforcement and potentially higher penalty amounts compared to prior years. Taxpayers should confirm the exact penalty rates in the published Gazette version of the Finance Act 2026.
  • Enhanced electronic filing requirements. ZRA has strengthened its expectation that all provisional returns be filed electronically through the e-services portal. Early indications suggest that manual submissions will be accepted only in exceptional circumstances.
  • Administrative clarifications. ZRA issued notices in early 2026 clarifying the instalment payment windows and reminding taxpayers of their obligations. These notices, available on the ZRA news page, supplement the statutory provisions and provide practical guidance on portal use.

These 2026 changes mean that more taxpayers may be brought into the provisional tax net, penalties for non-compliance may be more severe, and electronic filing is now effectively mandatory. Businesses should review their status against the updated thresholds as a priority.

Common Pitfalls When Filing Provisional Tax in Zambia, and How to Avoid Them

  • Filing without a valid TPIN. Every return and payment must carry the correct TPIN. Verify your TPIN on the ZRA portal before each filing cycle and ensure it matches your company registration or national ID records.
  • Under-estimating taxable income. Significantly under-estimating profits to reduce quarterly instalments exposes you to interest on the shortfall. Use prior-year actuals as a floor and document the rationale for any downward adjustment.
  • Missing the payment deadline. The 10-day window between filing and payment is tight. Set calendar reminders at least two weeks before each quarterly deadline and allow for bank clearing times.
  • Using the wrong payment reference. Payments that do not include the correct TPIN and provisional-tax type code may sit as unallocated funds in ZRA’s system, triggering demand notices. Double-check the reference before confirming any payment.
  • Failing to upload proof of payment. Submitting the return without attaching the bank receipt or e-payment confirmation means ZRA cannot match your payment to the return. Upload proof on the same day you pay.
  • Not adjusting after final assessment. If your actual taxable income exceeds the estimate, a top-up payment is required after assessment. Delaying this attracts further interest. Monitor ZRA assessment notices and act promptly.
  • Mixing PAYE income with provisional tax income. Salaried employees who also earn business income sometimes include employment emoluments in their provisional tax estimate, leading to double-counting. Separate PAYE-covered income from business income before calculating.
  • Incorrect instalment splitting. Dividing the annual liability unevenly across quarters, or paying the full amount in one quarter, can cause ZRA’s system to flag discrepancies. Unless ZRA’s published schedule specifies otherwise, use equal quarterly splits.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Emmanuel Manda at Musa Dudhia & Co., a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Zambia Revenue Authority, Tax Information
  2. Zambia Revenue Authority, Payment Due Dates
  3. Zambia Revenue Authority, News and Press Releases
  4. Zambia Revenue Authority, e-Services / TaxonApp

FAQs

How do I calculate provisional tax in Zambia?
Estimate your total taxable income for the charge year by subtracting allowable deductions and capital allowances from your assessable income. Apply the applicable income tax rate (30% for most companies; graduated bands for individuals). Divide the result into four equal quarterly instalments. See the worked provisional tax examples in this guide for detailed calculations.
All taxpayers with business, professional or investment income above the statutory turnover threshold must file. This includes companies, sole proprietors, partnerships and non-resident entities with a taxable presence in Zambia. Salaried employees whose entire liability is covered by PAYE are generally exempt. Check ZRA’s Tax Information page for the current threshold amount.
For the 2026 charge year, the standard filing and payment dates are: Q1, file by 31 March 2026, pay by 10 April 2026; Q2, file by 30 June 2026, pay by 10 July 2026; Q3, file by 30 September 2026, pay by 10 October 2026; Q4, file by 31 December 2026, pay by 10 January 2027. Confirm the exact schedule on ZRA’s Payment Due Dates page.
ZRA uses its e-services portal (also known as TaxonApp) for electronic filing of provisional returns. Log in with your TPIN, navigate to the provisional income tax section, complete the required fields (TPIN, charge year, estimated taxable income, instalment amount) and attach your supporting calculation worksheet. The portal generates a submission acknowledgement upon successful filing.
Yes. Non-resident entities with a taxable presence, such as a permanent establishment or branch, in Zambia must obtain a TPIN, appoint a local tax representative, and file provisional returns following the same procedure as domestic taxpayers. Foreign companies should seek specialist tax advice on permanent-establishment rules and any applicable double-taxation agreements.
Late filing and late payment attract penalties and interest under the Income Tax Act and Finance Act 2026. The penalty accrues for each month or part-month of default, and interest runs from the original due date until the date of actual payment. If you have missed a deadline, make the payment and file the return as soon as possible to minimise accumulating charges. Where ZRA has issued a demand or assessment, consider obtaining professional representation to negotiate or appeal.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How to File Provisional Tax in Zambia 2026, Calculate, Pay and File (step-by-step)

Send welcome message

Custom Message