Our Expert in Tanzania
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Last reviewed: 4 June 2026
Understanding how to register for VAT in Tanzania is one of the first compliance obligations any growing business must master once its taxable turnover approaches the statutory threshold. Under the Value Added Tax Act (CAP. 148 R. E. 2019), businesses operating on the Tanzania Mainland that make, or expect to make, taxable supplies of TZS 200,000,000 or more in any twelve-month period are required to register, while Zanzibar applies a lower threshold of TZS 100,000,000. The standard VAT rate stands at 18 %, and the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) now processes all new applications through its online IDRAS Taxpayer Portal, using the prescribed form ITX245. 02. E.
This guide walks through every step of the 2026 registration process, from checking eligibility and assembling documents, to submitting the application, passing TRA’s physical verification visit, and meeting post-registration filing obligations.
The VAT registration obligation in Tanzania hinges on turnover thresholds and entity type. Business owners, accountants and compliance teams need three pieces of information to decide whether registration is mandatory: the turnover test result, the applicable deadline, and the correct application channel. Below is a snapshot of the facts that matter most.
The thresholds are the gateway test. Getting them wrong, or testing against the wrong period, is one of the most common causes of late-registration penalties. The VAT Act sets out two parallel tests, and a business that fails either one must apply within 30 days.
A business must register if the total value of its taxable supplies in any continuous twelve-month period equals or exceeds TZS 200,000,000 (VAT Act CAP.148 R.E. 2019). The twelve-month window is rolling, it does not need to align with the calendar or financial year. The practical effect is that businesses should track cumulative monthly revenue on a rolling basis, not simply wait for year-end accounts.
| Month | Monthly Taxable Supplies (TZS) | Rolling 12-Month Total (TZS) | Registration Triggered? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 2025 | 15,000,000 | , | No |
| Feb–Nov 2025 | 17,000,000 avg. | , | No |
| Dec 2025 | 20,000,000 | 205,000,000 | Yes, apply by end Jan 2026 |
In the example above, the business crosses TZS 200,000,000 in December 2025. It has 30 days from that date, until the end of January 2026, to submit its VAT registration application through IDRAS.
The VAT registration threshold Tanzania framework also includes a six-month backstop. If taxable turnover reaches TZS 100,000,000 in any six consecutive months, registration is compulsory even if the annual threshold has not yet been crossed (TRA). This catches fast-growing businesses, for example, a start-up that launches in July 2025 and generates TZS 18,000,000 per month would cross TZS 100,000,000 before completing a full year of trading.
Certain categories of supplier must register irrespective of turnover:
Industry observers expect TRA to continue expanding the digital-services net in 2026, potentially capturing additional platform-based business models. Businesses in these categories should not wait for the turnover threshold, registration must happen before or immediately upon commencement of taxable supplies.
Beyond the mandatory categories, the VAT Act allows businesses that have not yet reached the threshold to register voluntarily as an intending trader. This is a valuable planning tool, it lets a business reclaim input VAT on start-up costs (equipment, premises fit-out, professional fees) before its first taxable sale.
| Entity Type | Registration Threshold / Rule | Filing / Other Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Standard business (Mainland) | ≥ TZS 200,000,000 annually (or semi-annual test) | Register on IDRAS; monthly VAT returns; issue tax invoices |
| Zanzibar business | ≥ TZS 100,000,000 annually | Register per Zanzibar rules; follow Zanzibar filing regime |
| Government / Specified entities | Mandatory regardless of turnover | Immediate registration; special invoicing rules |
| Foreign digital supplier (B2C) | Registration regardless of local turnover (per TRA guidance) | Collect VAT on B2C sales; register and remit as required |
An intending trader must demonstrate a genuine intention to commence taxable supplies. TRA typically expects supporting evidence such as signed contracts, purchase orders, lease agreements for business premises, or evidence of capital expenditure. The key benefit is the ability to recover input VAT on pre-trading costs, which can significantly reduce the cash-flow burden during the start-up phase. Applications follow the same IDRAS process described below, but should include a covering letter explaining the planned business activity and expected commencement date (TanzaniaInvest).
Assembling the correct documentation before logging into the TRA IDRAS portal is the single most effective way to avoid delays. Missing or mismatched documents are the primary cause of rejected or stalled applications. The table below lists every document typically required for a standard tax registration.
| Document | Accepted Examples | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) certificate | TRA-issued TIN PDF | Must match company name exactly; resolve any TIN mismatches before submitting |
| VAT registration form (ITX245.02.E) | Completed PDF or online form via IDRAS | Form reference: ITX245.02.E, required for all registrants |
| Certificate of Incorporation / Business registration | Certificate from BRELA or Registrar | For sole traders, a business licence plus national ID may suffice |
| Memorandum & Articles (companies) | Company M&A documents | Ensure they reflect the current company structure |
| Business licence / municipal permit | Local authority licence or permit | Must be valid at the date of application |
| Proof of business premises | Lease agreement, title deed, utility bill | TRA verification visits will inspect the premises |
| Bank account details | Bank statement, account confirmation letter | Account name should match the business name |
| Director / owner ID copies | Passport or national ID | Provide certified copies if requested by TRA |
| Supporting turnover evidence | Contracts, invoices, bank statements | Used for threshold calculations and TRA verification |
The ITX245.02.E form is the standard VAT registration application prescribed by TRA. Whether completed online through IDRAS or submitted as a PDF, the following fields demand particular care:
The TRA IDRAS portal (also called the Taxpayer Portal) is the only online channel for submitting a VAT registration application on the Mainland. The step-by-step process below reflects the current 2026 portal workflow.
The law requires a business to apply within 30 days of the date it first meets or exceeds the threshold (TRA). The trigger date is the date of the transaction that pushes cumulative turnover past TZS 200,000,000 (annual test) or TZS 100,000,000 (semi-annual test). Late applications attract penalties, see the penalties section below.
After submission, TRA may dispatch an officer to verify the business’s physical existence and operational status. Early indications from 2025–2026 practice suggest that verification visits are becoming more systematic. Inspectors typically check:
Practical tip: ensure someone authorised to speak on behalf of the business is present at the premises during the period following application submission. Have a physical file with copies of all uploaded documents ready for the inspector’s review.
[Editor: insert 4–6 annotated screenshots of the IDRAS portal workflow here, login screen, VAT registration menu, ITX245.02.E form fields, document upload interface, summary/confirmation screen. Redact all sensitive data.]
Once TRA approves the application, the business receives a VAT registration certificate containing its unique VAT registration number. This number must appear on every tax invoice the business issues. The VAT registration requirements Tanzania framework imposes several ongoing obligations from the effective date of registration.
The basic calculation is straightforward: output VAT (18 % charged on taxable supplies) minus input VAT (18 % paid on eligible business purchases) equals the net amount payable, or refundable. Certain supplies are zero-rated (e.g., exports) or exempt (e.g., specified financial services and basic food items), which affects both the output calculation and input VAT recoverability. A detailed guide on how to file VAT returns in Tanzania, including worked examples, will be published as a follow-on article.
Tanzania operates a VAT withholding regime in which designated payers, typically government institutions and large private-sector entities appointed by TRA, are required to withhold a portion of the VAT payable on purchases and remit it directly to TRA on behalf of the supplier (PwC). The likely practical effect of reinforced withholding rules in 2025–2026 is that more private-sector buyers may be designated as withholding agents, and TRA is expected to monitor remittance compliance more actively.
Withholding applies at the point of payment. The withheld amount is reported separately by the payer and credited against the supplier’s VAT liability in their return. Suppliers must ensure that the withheld amounts are correctly reflected when preparing their monthly returns to avoid overpayment or double-counting.
Non-compliance with VAT registration and filing obligations carries material financial consequences. The table below summarises the primary penalty categories.
| Offence | Penalty Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Late registration (failure to apply within 30 days) | Fixed penalty plus potential back-assessment of VAT from the date the threshold was crossed | TRA may assess output VAT retrospectively for the unregistered period |
| Late filing of VAT return | Penalty for each month or part-month the return is late | Applies even if no tax is payable for the period |
| Late payment of VAT | Interest on the outstanding amount, calculated from the due date | Interest compounds; pay promptly to minimise exposure |
| Issuing incorrect or incomplete tax invoices | Penalty per invoice; potential denial of input VAT credit to the buyer | Ensure all mandatory invoice fields are complete |
| Failure to maintain records | Penalty and potential estimated assessment by TRA | Keep records for the full statutory retention period |
Zanzibar operates a separate VAT regime with a lower registration threshold of TZS 100,000,000 per year (TanzaniaInvest). Businesses operating exclusively in Zanzibar register through the Zanzibar Revenue Board rather than TRA’s Mainland portal. However, businesses with operations on both the Mainland and in Zanzibar may need to register in both jurisdictions, the specific requirements depend on where taxable supplies are made.
Non-resident businesses that supply digital services directly to consumers in Tanzania are required to register for and collect VAT at the standard 18 % rate (PwC). This applies regardless of whether the supplier has a physical presence in the country. Covered services typically include streaming, software subscriptions, e-books, online advertising and cloud-based platforms. The registration process for foreign suppliers follows a simplified procedure through TRA, and industry observers expect further administrative guidance to be issued during 2026 as Tanzania aligns with international practice on taxing the digital economy.
To streamline the application process, use the resources below:
Understanding how to register for VAT in Tanzania is essential, but the process involves legal, procedural and practical complexities that can trip up even experienced compliance teams. From threshold calculations and TIN verification to navigating the TRA IDRAS portal and preparing for verification visits, each stage benefits from specialist guidance. Global Law Experts connects businesses with qualified tax practitioners across Tanzania who can manage the entire registration process, advise on withholding obligations, and ensure ongoing compliance with monthly filing and invoicing requirements. If your business is approaching the registration threshold, or you need to regularise a late registration, reach out through the Global Law Experts network for tailored, practitioner-led support.
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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