[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
local ownership rules zimbabwe

Zimbabwe 2026: Local‑ownership & Reserved‑sectors Compliance Guide for Foreign Investors

By Global Law Experts
– posted 58 minutes ago

Last reviewed: 17 May 2026. Check the Zimbabwe Government Gazette for any subsequent amendments to SI 215 of 2025.

Zimbabwe’s local ownership rules changed dramatically in late 2025, and every foreign investor operating in, or contemplating entry into, the country’s designated reserved sectors must now act. Statutory Instrument 215 of 2025 (the “Foreign Participation in Reserved Sectors” Regulations) was gazetted in December 2025, mandating that foreign-owned businesses in 14 reserved sectors divest a controlling 75 per cent stake to Zimbabwean citizens within three years. The Ministry of Industry and Commerce subsequently directed affected entities to submit regularisation plans by 31 January 2026, marking the start of an aggressive compliance timeline that runs through to 2028.

This guide provides the definitive, step-by-step framework that foreign investors, in-house counsel and corporate advisory teams need to navigate every deadline, threshold and restructuring option under Zimbabwe’s new local ownership rules.

Immediate Compliance Checklist: What to Do in the Next 30, 90 and 365 Days

Before reading the detailed analysis that follows, foreign investors should map their current obligations against this priority timeline:

  • Within 30 days. Confirm whether your business activities fall within any of the 14 reserved sectors. Review your share register to identify the percentage of foreign versus local ownership. Engage Zimbabwean legal counsel immediately if you have not already done so.
  • Within 90 days. If a regularisation plan has not yet been submitted to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce, prepare and file one as a matter of urgency. The Ministry’s original deadline was 31 January 2026; late submissions may attract heightened scrutiny. Begin identifying potential local partners or buyers for the equity that must be transferred.
  • Within 365 days. Execute the first phase of the divestment, a minimum 25 per cent equity transfer to Zimbabwean citizens, in line with the phased schedule prescribed by SI 215 of 2025. Ensure that all share‑transfer documentation, board resolutions and Registrar filings are completed. Begin planning the second and third divestment tranches to reach 75 per cent local ownership by the final deadline.

Failure to comply can result in licence revocation, fines and forced closure. The sections below explain every element of the new regime in detail.

Regulatory Framework: SI 215 of 2025 and Related Statutory Instruments

The cornerstone of Zimbabwe’s tightened local ownership rules is the Sovereign Wealth Fund, National Development Strategy and Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment Act framework, now operationalised by SI 215 of 2025. Understanding the layered statutory architecture is essential for any foreign investor seeking compliance.

What Is SI 215 of 2025?

SI 215 of 2025, formally titled the Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment (Foreign Participation in Reserved Sectors) Regulations, 2025, was gazetted in December 2025. It was made pursuant to the Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment Act [Chapter 14:33] and built on the reserved-sectors framework originally enacted under the Finance Act of 2018, which had extended eligibility from “indigenous Zimbabweans” to “citizens of Zimbabwe.” SI 215 added enforcement teeth: mandatory divestment timelines, permit requirements for new entrants and regularisation obligations for existing businesses.

Key Regulatory Instruments at a Glance

Instrument Date Gazetted / Effective Key Requirement
Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment Act [Chapter 14:33] Parent Act (as amended) Establishes reserved sectors and empowers the Minister to prescribe ownership thresholds
Finance Act of 2018 (amendment provisions) 2018 Extended reserved-sector ownership eligibility from “indigenous Zimbabweans” to “citizens of Zimbabwe”
SI 215 of 2025, Foreign Participation in Reserved Sectors Regulations December 2025 Caps foreign participation at 25 per cent equity; mandates phased divestment over three years; requires permits for new foreign entrants and regularisation plans for existing businesses

Practitioners should cross-reference the full text of SI 215 of 2025 (published in the Zimbabwe Government Gazette) alongside the Ministry of Industry and Commerce’s “Know Your Reserved Sector” guidance document. For interpretive commentary, the Mondaq analysis by Honey & Blanckenberg and the UNCTAD Investment Policy Hub summary provide valuable context on the foreign equity cap and divestment mechanics.

Which Sectors Are Reserved in Zimbabwe? Definitive List and Practical Implications

The reserved sectors in Zimbabwe represent the heart of SI 215’s impact. The regulations identify 14 economic sectors that are reserved exclusively, or near-exclusively, for Zimbabwean citizens. Foreign nationals may not enter these sectors without a permit and, where already present, must reduce their shareholding to a maximum of 25 per cent.

The following table reproduces the reserved-sector categories based on the Ministry of Industry and Commerce’s published list and contemporaneous reporting:

Reserved Sector Local-Ownership Rule Practical Implication for Foreign Investors
Transportation (taxis, commuter omnibuses) 75% citizen ownership required Foreign-owned operators must divest or exit; permit required for any continued minority stake
Retail and wholesale trade (below prescribed thresholds) 75% citizen ownership required Small and medium retail operations face immediate pressure; enforcement expected early
Bakeries 75% citizen ownership required Affects small-scale and artisanal bakeries; larger manufacturers may fall outside scope
Tobacco grading and packaging 75% citizen ownership required Foreign firms in the value chain should review operational versus ownership roles
Grain milling 75% citizen ownership required Significant impact on foreign-owned milling operations; JV structures may be required
Advertising agencies 75% citizen ownership required Multinational agencies operating in Zimbabwe must restructure local entities
Estate agencies 75% citizen ownership required Property firms with foreign ownership must restructure or cede controlling stakes
Employment agencies 75% citizen ownership required International recruitment firms with Zimbabwean subsidiaries are directly affected
Pharmacies (community/retail) 75% citizen ownership required High enforcement priority; affects foreign-owned retail pharmacy chains
Hairdressing and beauty salons 75% citizen ownership required Targets foreign nationals operating in personal-care services at the retail level
Provision of local arts and crafts 75% citizen ownership required Affects curio shops, galleries and craft markets with foreign ownership
Vending (informal sector) 75% citizen ownership required Reserved exclusively for citizens; enforcement focused on border towns and urban centres
Small-scale mining 75% citizen ownership required Artisanal and small-scale operations reserved; large-scale mining licences may be treated differently
Barber shops 75% citizen ownership required Part of the services ring-fence for local operators

Industry observers expect enforcement to begin with sectors where foreign participation is most visible at the retail and street level, taxis, pharmacies, small retail outlets and vending, before broadening to professional services such as advertising and employment agencies. Foreign investors should not wait for enforcement action to begin compliance planning.

Local Ownership Rules Zimbabwe: Thresholds, Deadlines and Penalties

The ownership threshold under SI 215 of 2025 is unambiguous: Zimbabwean citizens must acquire at least 75 per cent ownership of any business operating in a reserved sector. Foreign participation is capped at a maximum of 25 per cent equity. The divestment is phased over three years from the date SI 215 was promulgated in December 2025, with the final compliance deadline falling in late 2028.

Phased Divestment Timeline

According to the UNCTAD Investment Policy Hub summary and commentary from Honey & Blanckenberg, the phased schedule requires:

  • First tranche (Year 1): A minimum of 25 per cent equity must be transferred to Zimbabwean citizens.
  • Second tranche (Year 2): Cumulative local ownership must reach at least 50 per cent.
  • Final tranche (Year 3, by late 2028): Full compliance at 75 per cent local ownership.

Compliance Summary by Entity Type

Entity Type / Status Required Foreign Ownership Cap Key Reporting / Filing Action
Existing foreign-owned company in a reserved sector Max 25% foreign (75% local required within transition period) Submit regularisation plan to Ministry; execute phased share transfers and re-register within stated deadlines
New foreign investor (post-SI) Not permitted to acquire a controlling stake in reserved sectors (local majority required from inception) Permit application to Ministry of Industry and Commerce; pre-investment compliance review essential
Licenced special zone / IFSC entity Possible exemptions (case-by-case) Confirm with Ministry and Victoria Falls IFSC authority; obtain written exemption where relevant

Penalties for Non-Compliance

SI 215 empowers the Ministry to take enforcement action against non-compliant businesses. The likely practical effect will include:

  • Licence revocation, businesses that fail to submit a regularisation plan or meet divestment milestones may lose their operating licences.
  • Forced closure, the Ministry can direct non-compliant foreign-owned businesses to cease operations entirely.
  • Fines and administrative penalties, monetary penalties may be imposed under the parent Act’s enforcement provisions.
  • Reputational and commercial consequences, non-compliance creates uncertainty for banking relationships, supplier contracts and insurance coverage.

How to Determine If Your Business Is Affected: A Diagnostic Checklist

Not every foreign-owned company in Zimbabwe is caught by the new regulations. Use the following diagnostic to assess exposure:

  1. Map your business activities to the 14 reserved sectors. Compare every activity in your Zimbabwean operation against the Ministry’s published list. A company may be caught even if only part of its business falls within a reserved sector.
  2. Confirm your legal entity type and registration. Determine whether the business is registered as a Zimbabwean company, branch office or partnership. Foreign branches conducting reserved-sector activities are equally affected.
  3. Check licences and possible exemptions. Certain licence types, particularly large-scale mining licences and Victoria Falls IFSC registrations, may receive different treatment. Review the specific terms of your licence against SI 215.
  4. Review the share register and identify ultimate controllers. The regulations look through to beneficial ownership. A Zimbabwean-incorporated company that is ultimately controlled by foreign shareholders through a holding structure is still subject to the divestment requirement.
  5. Determine the current foreign/local ownership split. If Zimbabwean citizens already hold 75 per cent or more, no further action is needed. If the split is below that threshold, the business must regularise.

If any step above triggers a compliance obligation, proceed immediately to the regularisation process outlined below.

Regularisation Process: Re-Registration, Permits and Submitting a Plan

The foreign investors compliance pathway in Zimbabwe centres on the regularisation plan, a formal submission to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce detailing how the business will achieve 75 per cent local ownership within the prescribed timeline. The Ministry’s guidance, published alongside SI 215, provides the procedural framework.

Preparing and Submitting a Regularisation Plan

According to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce and commentary from Honey & Blanckenberg, affected entities were initially directed to submit regularisation plans by 31 January 2026. A compliant regularisation plan should include the following elements:

  • Current ownership structure: a certified copy of the share register showing all shareholders and their citizenship status.
  • Proposed divestment schedule: a year-by-year plan showing how the company will transfer 25 per cent, 50 per cent and ultimately 75 per cent equity to Zimbabwean citizens by the final deadline.
  • Identity of proposed local acquirers: details of the Zimbabwean citizens or entities who will acquire the shares, including proof of citizenship.
  • Valuation methodology: an explanation of how shares will be valued for the purposes of transfer, including independent valuation reports where applicable.
  • Financial statements: audited accounts for the most recent financial year.
  • Board resolution: a resolution from the company’s board of directors authorising the regularisation process.
  • Compliance timeline: specific milestone dates aligned with the three-year phased divestment schedule.

Filing and Liaison With the Ministry

Plans must be submitted to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce. Foreign nationals operating in reserved sectors must also obtain a permit to continue operations during the transition period. The Ministry has indicated that it will review each plan individually and may impose conditions, for example, requiring accelerated divestment in sectors where enforcement is prioritised, or mandating periodic progress reports.

What to Expect After Filing

Early indications suggest that the Ministry is taking a structured approach to approval: businesses that filed by the 31 January 2026 deadline can expect written acknowledgement, followed by a conditional approval setting out the specific divestment milestones the company must meet. Non-responsive businesses, those that neither filed a plan nor engaged with the Ministry, are likely to face enforcement action first. Companies that missed the initial deadline should file immediately and include an explanation for the delay.

Transactional Options If You Must Reduce Foreign Shareholding

For many foreign investors, the central challenge under the local ownership rules in Zimbabwe is not understanding the legal obligation but executing the transaction to divest shares. Several restructuring options are available, each with distinct commercial, tax and foreign-exchange implications. Understanding how to divest shares in Zimbabwe efficiently is critical to preserving value.

Restructuring Option How It Meets the SI Requirement Key Legal Documents Required
Direct share sale to local partners Transfers legal and beneficial ownership of the required percentage to Zimbabwean citizens immediately or in tranches Share purchase agreement; board and shareholder resolutions; Registrar filings; exchange control approvals for repatriation of proceeds
Staged joint venture / earn-in arrangement Local partner acquires equity incrementally, aligning with the phased divestment schedule; may include performance milestones JV agreement; shareholders’ agreement; subscription or share transfer instruments; escrow arrangements
Management / technical services / franchise agreement Foreign investor relinquishes equity ownership but retains operational influence through contractual arrangements Management agreement; technical services agreement; franchise agreement; share transfer documents
Put/call option and escrow structures Provides certainty of future transfer while allowing phased pricing; escrow protects both parties during transition Option agreement; escrow agreement; share pledge; board resolutions
Orderly exit (full divestment and wind-down) Foreign investor exits the reserved sector entirely by selling 100% of the business or winding up the entity Sale of business agreement or share sale agreement; Companies Act wind-up procedures; Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe exchange control approvals

Each option must be assessed against the investor’s commercial objectives, the availability of creditworthy local buyers, tax efficiency (including capital gains tax and withholding tax on dividends or share buybacks), and the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe’s exchange control regulations governing repatriation of sale proceeds. Industry observers expect that staged JV and management-agreement structures will be the most popular routes, as they allow foreign investors to retain operational involvement while complying with the 75 per cent local ownership threshold.

Sector-Specific Notes and Exemptions: IFSC, Mining and Financial Services

While SI 215 of 2025 applies broadly across the 14 reserved sectors, certain segments of the Zimbabwean economy may be subject to different rules or potential carve-outs. Foreign investors should examine their sector-specific position carefully.

Victoria Falls International Financial Services Centre (IFSC)

The Victoria Falls IFSC was established to attract international financial services businesses under a distinct regulatory and tax regime. The interaction between IFSC registration and the reserved-sectors regulations is not expressly addressed in SI 215. Industry observers expect that IFSC-registered entities, particularly those providing exclusively cross-border financial services, may be treated differently, but no blanket exemption has been formally gazetted. Investors should obtain written confirmation from both the IFSC authority and the Ministry of Industry and Commerce before relying on any exemption.

Mining Licences

SI 215 reserves “small-scale mining” for Zimbabwean citizens. Large-scale mining operations conducted under licences issued by the Ministry of Mines and Mining Development are generally not classified as reserved-sector activities for these purposes. However, the boundary between “small-scale” and “large-scale” mining is determined by the terms of each licence and the Mines and Minerals Act. Foreign investors in the mining sector should review their specific licence conditions.

Banking, Insurance and Financial Services

Mainstream banking and insurance, regulated by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and the Insurance and Pensions Commission respectively, are not listed among the 14 reserved sectors. These sectors have their own ownership and prudential requirements. Investors in international business and financial services should nonetheless monitor whether future statutory instruments extend the reserved-sector framework.

Risk Management and Enforcement Scenarios

Foreign investors must plan not only for compliance but also for the realistic enforcement scenarios that may arise if deadlines are missed or if commercial disputes emerge during the divestment process.

  • Licence revocation and forced closure: The Ministry retains discretion to revoke operating licences and order cessation of business for non-compliant entities. This is the most immediate commercial risk.
  • Disputes over share valuation: Disagreements between foreign sellers and local buyers over the fair value of divested equity are highly likely. Independent valuations and pre-agreed pricing mechanisms in sale agreements are essential risk-mitigation tools.
  • Bilateral investment treaty (BIT) protections: Foreign investors should review whether a bilateral investment treaty exists between Zimbabwe and their home country. Zimbabwe has signed BITs with several nations, and these may provide protections against expropriation without adequate compensation. However, invoking BIT protections is a measure of last resort and should be pursued alongside, not instead of, commercial compliance planning.
  • Commercial arbitration: Where divestment transactions are governed by agreements that include arbitration clauses, disputes over performance, pricing or timing can be resolved through arbitration rather than Zimbabwean courts. International arbitration seated outside Zimbabwe may be available under certain BITs.
  • Interim management agreements: Where divestment cannot be completed within the regulatory timeline due to commercial circumstances (e.g., absence of a willing buyer), an interim management agreement, in which day-to-day control passes to a Zimbabwean citizen while share transfer is finalised, may demonstrate good-faith compliance.

Practical Annexes: Checklists, Timelines and Sample Templates

The following resources are designed to support foreign investors through the compliance process. Each template is drafted for Zimbabwean jurisdiction use and should be customised with the assistance of qualified legal counsel.

  • Compliance Checklist (PDF): A step-by-step checklist covering diagnostic assessment, regularisation plan preparation, filing, divestment execution and post-completion reporting.
  • Sample Regularisation Plan Template: A skeleton regularisation plan conforming to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce’s requirements, including all required fields (current ownership, proposed divestment schedule, acquirer details, valuation methodology, financials and board resolution).
  • Sample Divestment Share Purchase Agreement Clause: A model clause for inclusion in share purchase agreements, covering phased transfer, pricing mechanism, conditions precedent (including Ministry approval) and exchange control compliance.
  • Sample Board Resolution: A template board resolution authorising the company to enter into the regularisation and divestment process.

Note: These templates are provided for informational purposes and must be adapted to the specific circumstances of each transaction. Professional legal advice is essential before execution.

Conclusion: Next Steps for Foreign Investors Under Zimbabwe’s Local Ownership Rules

Zimbabwe’s local ownership rules represent the most significant change to the country’s foreign-investment landscape in years. SI 215 of 2025 leaves no room for ambiguity: foreign participation in reserved sectors is capped at 25 per cent, divestment must be completed by 2028, and the Ministry of Industry and Commerce is actively monitoring compliance. The consequences of inaction, licence revocation, forced closure, fines, are severe.

Foreign investors should take immediate action: confirm whether their business is affected, file or update a regularisation plan with the Ministry, engage qualified Zimbabwean counsel to structure the divestment transaction, and begin identifying local partners. The phased timeline offers a window to preserve commercial value, but that window is narrowing. For jurisdictional guidance on complying with Zimbabwe’s local ownership rules, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with experienced practitioners in Harare and across the country.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Vunganai Walter Chivore at ChivoreDzingirai Group of lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Industry & Commerce, “Know Your Reserved Sector”
  2. Mondaq, Unpacking SI 215 of 2025: Foreign Participation in Reserved Sectors
  3. UNCTAD Investment Policy Hub, Zimbabwe Restricts Foreign Ownership in Several Sectors
  4. Chambers Practice Guides, Investing In Zimbabwe 2026
  5. The Herald (Zimbabwe), Zim Mandates 75pc Local Ownership in Reserved Sectors
  6. Honey & Blanckenberg, An Overview of Foreign Participation in Reserved Sectors Regulations (SI 215 of 2025)
  7. Envoy Global, Zimbabwe Issues New Regulations Limiting Foreign Participation in Reserved Sectors

FAQs

What are Zimbabwe's 2026 local-ownership requirements for foreign businesses?
Under SI 215 of 2025, foreign participation in each of the 14 listed reserved sectors is capped at a maximum of 25 per cent equity. Zimbabwean citizens must hold at least 75 per cent ownership. Existing foreign-owned businesses in these sectors must divest to meet this threshold through a phased process over three years, with the final deadline in late 2028. New foreign investors cannot acquire a controlling stake in reserved sectors.
The Ministry of Industry and Commerce’s “Know Your Reserved Sector” guidance document identifies the 14 reserved sectors, which include transportation (taxis and commuter omnibuses), retail and wholesale trade below prescribed thresholds, bakeries, tobacco grading and packaging, grain milling, advertising agencies, estate agencies, employment agencies, pharmacies, hairdressing and beauty salons, arts and crafts, vending, small-scale mining and barber shops. The full list is available from the Ministry’s website.
A regularisation plan must be submitted to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce. It should include the current ownership structure (certified share register), a proposed year-by-year divestment schedule, details and citizenship proof of the proposed local acquirers, a valuation methodology with independent valuation reports, audited financial statements, and a board resolution authorising the process. The Ministry originally set 31 January 2026 as the submission deadline; entities that have not yet filed should do so immediately.
Penalties can include licence revocation, fines, forced divestment orders, and directed closure of the non-compliant business. The Ministry of Industry and Commerce has enforcement discretion, and early indications suggest that businesses that have not engaged with the regularisation process at all will face the most severe consequences. Non-compliance also creates secondary risks, including disruption to banking relationships and insurance coverage.
Several transactional routes are available: a direct share sale to identified local partners, a staged joint-venture or earn-in arrangement, a management or franchise agreement that transfers ownership while preserving operational involvement, a put/call option with escrow, or an orderly full exit. Each option carries distinct tax, foreign-exchange and commercial implications. Where no willing buyer is immediately available, interim management agreements can demonstrate good-faith compliance while the search continues.
Foreign investors should review the terms of any bilateral investment treaty between Zimbabwe and their home country, as these may provide protections against expropriation without adequate compensation. Contractual arbitration clauses in divestment agreements offer an additional dispute-resolution avenue. There is no formal administrative appeals process expressly established by SI 215 of 2025 itself, so engagement with experienced legal counsel from the outset is strongly recommended.

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.

Newsletter Sign Up
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

Join Mailing List

GLE

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

Zimbabwe 2026: Local‑ownership & Reserved‑sectors Compliance Guide for Foreign Investors

Send welcome message

Custom Message