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Mauritius VAT digital services 2026

Mauritius VAT for Digital & Electronic Services, What Accounting Teams and Foreign Suppliers Must Do in 2026

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The rules governing Mauritius VAT digital services 2026 represent one of the most consequential indirect-tax changes the island has introduced in a decade. Effective 1 January 2026, the Finance Act 2025 amended the Value Added Tax Act 1998 to require every foreign supplier of digital or electronic services to register for VAT with the Mauritius Revenue Authority (MRA), charge VAT at 15%, and file periodic returns, even without a physical presence in the country. For accounting teams inside Mauritius, the reform creates new bookkeeping obligations around supplier invoices, VAT control accounts, and input-tax recovery.

This guide translates the legislation into step-by-step actions: registration workflows, invoicing templates, journal-entry examples, and an audit-readiness checklist that finance managers and foreign suppliers can implement immediately.

Quick Summary, What Changed and Why This Matters

The Finance Act 2025 inserted new provisions into the VAT Act targeting foreign suppliers of digital and electronic services consumed by customers in Mauritius. From 1 January 2026, those suppliers must compulsorily register for VAT with the MRA, charge 15% VAT on every qualifying supply, and remit the tax through the MRA’s electronic filing portal. The change aligns Mauritius with more than 110 jurisdictions worldwide that now tax cross-border digital supplies at the point of consumption.

Here are the three immediate “must-do” items for every affected party:

  • Foreign suppliers. Register for VAT with MRA, update billing systems to add 15% VAT, and prepare to file returns.
  • Mauritian businesses receiving digital services. Verify that foreign suppliers are charging VAT correctly, update accounts-payable procedures, and reconcile the new VAT input lines in monthly returns.
  • Accounting teams and auditors. Create new general-ledger codes for foreign digital services VAT, draft journal-entry templates, and document the audit trail from invoice to VAT return.

Legislative and Regulatory Framework

Yes, there is now VAT on digital services in Mauritius. The legal foundation is the Finance Act 2025, which amended the VAT Act 1998 to bring foreign-supplied digital and electronic services within the scope of Mauritius VAT for the first time. The standard rate of 15% applies. The MRA published official guidance and a comprehensive Guide for Foreign Suppliers to detail the registration procedure, the services in scope, and the compliance obligations.

Key Legal References

  • Finance Act 2025. Introduced the amendment to the VAT Act, defining “digital or electronic services” and establishing the obligation for foreign suppliers to register and charge VAT from 1 January 2026.
  • MRA, VAT on Digital or Electronic Services from Foreign Suppliers. The MRA’s dedicated web page provides the authoritative regulatory guidance, including scope definitions, registration links, and filing instructions.
  • MRA Guide for Foreign Suppliers (PDF, 16 pages). A step-by-step manual covering registration documents, invoicing requirements, and simplified procedures.

Industry observers expect the MRA to refine its guidance over the course of 2026 as practical questions emerge around platform-economy intermediaries and digital marketplace operators. Accounting teams should monitor the MRA website for updated circulars.

Mauritius VAT Digital Services 2026, Who Is in Scope

All foreign suppliers of digital or electronic services to customers located in Mauritius must register for VAT with the MRA, regardless of turnover. This compulsory registration applies irrespective of whether the Mauritian recipient is a VAT-registered business (B2B) or a private consumer (B2C).

Place-of-Supply Test

The place of supply is determined by the location of the recipient. If the customer is in Mauritius, identified by billing address, IP address, country code of the SIM card, or other location indicators, the supply falls within scope. The following decision flow summarises the obligation:

  1. Is the supplier non-resident (no fixed establishment in Mauritius)? → Proceed to step 2.
  2. Does the supplier provide digital or electronic services? → Proceed to step 3.
  3. Is the customer located in Mauritius? → The supply is subject to 15% VAT.
  4. The foreign supplier must register for VAT with MRA and charge VAT.

Services in Scope, Examples

Digital and electronic services covered under the Finance Act 2025 amendments include, but are not limited to:

  • Software-as-a-Service (SaaS). Cloud-based accounting software, CRM platforms, project-management tools.
  • Streaming and downloads. Music, video, e-books, games, and apps delivered electronically.
  • Online advertising. Search-engine ads, social-media advertising, programmatic display.
  • E-learning. Online courses, webinars, virtual training platforms.
  • Cloud infrastructure. Web hosting, data storage, cloud computing services.
  • Digital marketplace intermediary services. Platform fees charged by app stores or digital marketplaces.

Services that require significant human intervention, such as live one-to-one consultancy delivered over video, may fall outside the scope of “electronically supplied” services. Compliance for Mauritian businesses depends on correctly classifying the services they purchase and ensuring their suppliers are registered.

Registration and Compliance Workflow for Foreign Suppliers

VAT registration Mauritius 2026 is compulsory for all foreign suppliers providing in-scope digital services to Mauritian customers. There is no turnover threshold: registration is required from the first taxable supply. The MRA operates an electronic registration portal specifically for foreign suppliers.

Step-by-Step Registration Process

  1. Access the MRA e-services portal. Navigate to the VAT on Digital or Electronic Services section on the MRA website.
  2. Complete the registration application. Provide the company’s legal name, country of incorporation, tax identification number in the home jurisdiction, contact details, and a description of digital services supplied.
  3. Appoint a representative (if required). The MRA Guide for Foreign Suppliers sets out circumstances in which a local representative or fiscal agent may be needed.
  4. Submit supporting documents. These include a certificate of incorporation, proof of business activity, and details of the digital services offered.
  5. Receive the VAT registration number. Once approved, the MRA issues a VAT registration number that must appear on all invoices to Mauritian customers.
  6. Configure billing systems. Update invoicing, ERP, and payment platforms to apply 15% VAT on Mauritius-destined transactions.

Common Registration Errors to Avoid

  • Assuming a turnover threshold applies. Unlike the standard domestic VAT registration threshold, foreign digital services VAT Mauritius registration is compulsory from the first supply.
  • Failing to update invoicing systems before the first supply. Invoices issued without a valid MRA registration number will be non-compliant.
  • Overlooking marketplace obligations. Digital marketplace operators may bear the collection obligation on behalf of underlying sellers, verify the exact rules with MRA guidance.

Invoicing, Pricing, and Customer Notices

VAT invoicing Mauritius 2026 rules require foreign suppliers to issue compliant invoices for every taxable supply. The invoice must clearly show the VAT charged, enabling Mauritian business recipients to claim input-tax credits where eligible.

Mandatory Invoice Fields

According to the MRA Guide for Foreign Suppliers, each invoice must include:

  • Supplier name and VAT registration number issued by MRA.
  • Invoice date and unique invoice number.
  • Description of the digital or electronic service supplied.
  • Taxable amount (net of VAT).
  • VAT rate (15%) and VAT amount in Mauritian Rupees (MUR) or the transaction currency, with the MUR equivalent stated.
  • Total amount payable (inclusive of VAT).
  • Customer name and, for B2B transactions, the customer’s VAT registration number.

Sample Invoice, B2B SaaS Subscription

Field Example
Supplier CloudTech Inc. (VAT Reg: MU-XXXX-XXXX)
Invoice date 15 February 2026
Invoice number INV-2026-00451
Description SaaS, Project Management Platform (monthly licence)
Net amount MUR 10,000.00
VAT @ 15% MUR 1,500.00
Total payable MUR 11,500.00
Customer Mauritian Holdings Ltd (VAT Reg: VXXXXXXX)

Sample Invoice, B2C Streaming Service

Field Example
Supplier StreamGlobal Ltd (VAT Reg: MU-YYYY-YYYY)
Invoice date 1 March 2026
Invoice number INV-2026-89012
Description Monthly video-streaming subscription
Price (VAT inclusive) MUR 575.00 (incl. MUR 75.00 VAT)
Customer Individual consumer, Mauritius

For B2C supplies, industry observers expect most foreign suppliers to display a VAT-inclusive price to end consumers, consistent with international best practice for digital subscriptions.

Accounting Treatment, Journal Entries and VAT Bookkeeping

This section addresses the core question: what invoicing, record-keeping, and VAT accounting entries do Mauritian businesses need for imported digital services? The answer depends on whether the foreign supplier has registered and is charging 15% VAT (the mechanism established under the Finance Act 2025 amendments), or whether the Mauritian recipient must self-account.

Under the 2026 framework, foreign suppliers are required to register and charge VAT directly. The primary compliance burden therefore sits with the supplier. However, Mauritian recipients must still record the transaction correctly to support input-VAT recovery and to satisfy audit requirements.

Scenario A, Foreign Supplier Charges 15% VAT (Standard Case)

A Mauritian company purchases a cloud-hosting service for MUR 20,000 per month. The foreign supplier charges MUR 3,000 VAT (15%). The Mauritian company is VAT-registered and uses the service for taxable business activity.

Date Account Debit (MUR) Credit (MUR) Notes
01/02/2026 IT Services Expense (P&L) 20,000 Net cost of cloud hosting
01/02/2026 VAT Input, Digital Services (BS) 3,000 15% VAT per supplier invoice
01/02/2026 Accounts Payable, CloudHost Inc. 23,000 Total invoice amount

At month-end, the VAT Input, Digital Services balance is included in the VAT return as claimable input tax (subject to the company’s entitlement to recover input VAT under the VAT Act).

Scenario B, Self-Accounting Where Supplier Has Not Yet Registered

During a transitional period, a Mauritian business may receive a digital service from a foreign supplier that has not yet completed MRA registration. In this case, the likely practical effect will be that the Mauritian recipient must self-account for the VAT to avoid non-compliance. The self-accounting entry records both the output-tax liability and the corresponding input-tax claim simultaneously.

Date Account Debit (MUR) Credit (MUR) Notes
01/02/2026 IT Services Expense (P&L) 20,000 Net cost of service
01/02/2026 VAT Input, Self-Accounted (BS) 3,000 Claimable if for taxable activity
01/02/2026 VAT Output, Self-Accounted (BS) 3,000 Liability to MRA
01/02/2026 Accounts Payable, Supplier 20,000 Net amount payable to supplier

The net VAT impact is nil where the business is fully entitled to input-VAT recovery, but both the output and input lines must appear on the VAT return.

Scenario C, Foreign SaaS Provider Bookkeeping (Supplier Side)

A foreign SaaS provider registered with MRA invoices a Mauritian customer MUR 10,000 plus MUR 1,500 VAT. The supplier records the collection as follows:

Date Account Debit (MUR) Credit (MUR) Notes
15/02/2026 Accounts Receivable, Customer 11,500 Total receivable
15/02/2026 Revenue, SaaS Mauritius (P&L) 10,000 Net revenue
15/02/2026 VAT Payable, MRA (BS) 1,500 15% collected; due on next return

When the supplier remits VAT to MRA:

Date Account Debit (MUR) Credit (MUR) Notes
20/03/2026 VAT Payable, MRA (BS) 1,500 Settlement of liability
20/03/2026 Bank, MRA Payment 1,500 Wire transfer to MRA

Reconciliation Checklist, Monthly Close

  • Reconcile the VAT Input, Digital Services sub-ledger to supplier invoices received.
  • Confirm every foreign-supplier invoice includes a valid MRA VAT registration number.
  • Match VAT output entries (self-accounted) to the VAT return filed with MRA.
  • Review the Accounts Payable ageing for unregistered foreign suppliers and escalate for follow-up.
  • Archive PDF copies of all digital-service invoices, MRA registration confirmations, and bank remittance receipts.

VAT Returns, Payment, Remittance, and Audit Implications

Foreign suppliers registered with MRA must file VAT returns and remit collected VAT electronically through the MRA e-services portal. The filing frequency and deadlines are specified in the MRA Guide for Foreign Suppliers. Late filing and late payment attract penalties and interest charges under the VAT Act.

Key Compliance Points

  • Filing frequency. Returns are submitted in accordance with the periods prescribed by MRA upon registration.
  • Payment method. VAT is remitted electronically, bank transfers to the MRA are the standard channel for foreign suppliers.
  • Penalties. Non-registration, late filing, and late payment each carry penalties including fines and interest. The MRA has enforcement authority to pursue non-compliant foreign suppliers.
  • Record retention. All invoices, accounting records, and supporting documents must be retained for the statutory period as prescribed under the VAT Act.

What Auditors Will Look For

Early indications suggest that MRA audits and external financial audits will focus on the following areas for Mauritius VAT digital services 2026 compliance:

  • MRA registration evidence. Confirmation that foreign suppliers hold a valid VAT registration number.
  • Invoice completeness. Every invoice must contain all mandatory fields (registration number, VAT amount, rate).
  • VAT control-account reconciliation. Monthly reconciliation of VAT input and output sub-ledgers to filed returns.
  • Bank remittance trails. Proof that collected VAT has been remitted to MRA within prescribed deadlines.
  • IT system documentation. Evidence that billing platforms were configured to apply the correct rate and customer-location logic.

Practical Checklist for Accounting Teams and Foreign Suppliers

Use this checklist to confirm readiness for the 2026 VAT obligations on foreign digital services VAT Mauritius:

  1. Register with MRA via the e-services portal (foreign suppliers), retain the registration confirmation.
  2. Update ERP and billing systems to apply 15% VAT on supplies to Mauritian customers.
  3. Create new general-ledger codes: VAT Input, Digital Services, VAT Output, Self-Accounted, and VAT Payable, MRA.
  4. Update invoice templates to include all MRA-mandated fields (registration number, VAT rate, VAT amount).
  5. Train accounts-payable and accounts-receivable teams on the new journal-entry workflows.
  6. Reconcile the VAT control account monthly and tie to filed VAT returns.
  7. Retain MRA registration confirmation, all invoices, and bank remittance receipts for the statutory retention period.
  8. Update customer-facing terms and pricing pages to reflect VAT-inclusive prices (B2C) or itemised VAT (B2B).
  9. Implement customer-location verification logic (billing address, IP geolocation) to correctly identify Mauritius-based customers.
  10. Establish a periodic compliance review, quarterly at minimum, to catch registration lapses by new suppliers.
  11. Brief external auditors on the new VAT treatment and provide access to the digital-services sub-ledger.
  12. Monitor the MRA website for updated circulars, rate changes, or expanded scope definitions.

Comparison Table, Reporting Obligations by Entity Type

Entity Type Key Registration & Filing Obligation What Accounting Teams Must Do
Mauritian business (recipient) Ensure the foreign supplier charges VAT; if the supplier has not registered, self-account for VAT. Reclaim input VAT where eligible. Record the supplier invoice correctly, post VAT on purchases to the input-tax sub-ledger, and reconcile the VAT control account monthly.
Foreign supplier (non‑resident) Compulsory VAT registration with MRA regardless of turnover. Charge 15% VAT to all Mauritius customers. File returns and remit VAT per MRA schedule. Configure billing and ERP systems, issue compliant invoices with MRA registration number, and remit VAT to MRA electronically.
VAT-registered Mauritian vendor buying digital services Verify that the foreign supplier is MRA-registered. If a self-accounting mechanism applies, post both output and input VAT entries and include them in the VAT return. Post the appropriate journal entries (supplier-charged or self-accounted), include the amounts in the VAT return, and reclaim input VAT if the purchase relates to taxable activity.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mohamed Reshad Sadool at Accounting & Consulting Group / Comprehensive Financial Services, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Mauritius Revenue Authority, VAT on Digital or Electronic Services from Foreign Suppliers
  2. MRA, Guide for Foreign Suppliers (PDF)
  3. Andersen, Finance Act 2025 Updates on Digital or Electronic Services
  4. KPMG Tax Alert, VAT on Digital and Electronic Services (January 2026)
  5. PwC Mauritius, VAT on Digital and Electronic Services
  6. Fonoa, Mauritius VAT Rules for Foreign Digital Services (From 2026)
  7. Deloitte Mauritius, VAT on Digital and Electronic Services
  8. WTS Global, Mauritius: VAT on Digital Services

FAQs

Who must register for VAT in Mauritius from 1 January 2026?
All foreign suppliers of digital or electronic services to customers in Mauritius must compulsorily register for VAT with the MRA, regardless of their turnover. Mauritian businesses that are already VAT-registered must also comply as recipients by correctly recording VAT on imported digital services.
In-scope services include SaaS subscriptions, streaming and downloadable content, online advertising, e-learning platforms, cloud computing and hosting, and app-store or digital-marketplace intermediary services. The Finance Act 2025 defines these as services delivered over the internet or an electronic network with minimal human intervention.
The standard VAT rate of 15% applies to all qualifying digital and electronic services supplied to customers in Mauritius from 1 January 2026.
Foreign suppliers must register with MRA through the e-services portal, charge 15% VAT on each supply, issue compliant invoices, and file VAT returns and remit collected VAT electronically according to the filing periods set by MRA.
Every invoice must show the supplier’s MRA VAT registration number, invoice date, unique invoice number, description of the service, net taxable amount, VAT rate (15%), VAT amount, and total amount payable. For B2B transactions, the customer’s VAT registration number should also appear.
When the foreign supplier charges VAT, the Mauritian buyer debits the expense account and VAT Input, Digital Services, and credits Accounts Payable for the gross amount. Where self-accounting applies, the buyer also records a VAT Output, Self-Accounted credit entry. Detailed worked examples appear in the Accounting Treatment section above.
Yes, provided the purchase is used for taxable business activity and the business is VAT-registered. The input VAT must be supported by a compliant supplier invoice and included in the relevant VAT return filed with MRA.
Penalties include fines for non-registration, interest on late VAT payments, and surcharges for late filing of returns. The MRA has enforcement powers to pursue non-compliant foreign suppliers. Specific penalty amounts and interest rates are prescribed under the VAT Act and published by MRA.
The scope of Mauritius VAT digital services 2026 covers electronically supplied services. Tangible goods imported into Mauritius are subject to customs duties and import VAT under separate provisions. Digital content delivered electronically, such as e-books, software downloads, and digital music, falls within the definition of electronic services and is therefore subject to the 15% VAT.

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Mauritius VAT for Digital & Electronic Services, What Accounting Teams and Foreign Suppliers Must Do in 2026

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