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The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 Uganda (Bill No. 13 of 2026), tabled in Parliament on 15 April 2026, introduces mandatory registration for persons and entities classified as “agents of foreigners,” imposes caps on foreign funding, and creates a new enforcement regime backed by criminal penalties and ministerial revocation powers. For foreign-owned companies, cross-border lenders, and investors with Ugandan exposure, the Bill demands immediate attention, not because it has been enacted, but because the compliance obligations it contemplates will require structural changes to contracts, governance frameworks, and financing arrangements that take time to implement.
This guide provides a clause-level walkthrough of the Bill’s key provisions, a practical compliance playbook, and transaction remediation checklists designed for general counsel, in-house legal teams, and advisers who need to act now.
Three actions every affected entity should begin immediately:
Bill No. 13 of 2026, formally titled the Protection of Sovereignty Bill, 2026, was introduced by the State Minister for Internal Affairs. Its stated object is to protect Uganda’s sovereignty by regulating foreign influence in the country’s political, economic, and social affairs. The Bill creates a registration and licensing framework, establishes funding thresholds, and empowers the responsible Minister to monitor, investigate, and sanction non-compliant entities.
The Bill is organised into several parts covering definitions, registration of agents of foreigners, funding restrictions, offences and penalties, and miscellaneous provisions. At a glance:
| Bill Part | Subject Matter | Key Clauses |
|---|---|---|
| Preliminary | Definitions, “foreigner,” “agent of a foreigner,” “foreign funding” | Clauses 1–3 |
| Registration | Mandatory registration, application process, certificate issuance | Clauses 14–20 |
| Funding Restrictions | Cap on foreign funding, reporting thresholds | Clause 22 |
| Enforcement | Penalties, ministerial revocation, investigations | Various (see penalties section below) |
| Miscellaneous | Regulations, commencement, transitional provisions | Final clauses |
Understanding the Bill’s structure is the first step toward assessing its impact on foreign investment Uganda 2026 decisions. The analysis below follows the Bill’s architecture and maps each major provision to concrete corporate actions.
As of 1 May 2026, the Bill has been tabled but has not yet been enacted. Industry observers expect committee-stage hearings and public debate to continue through mid-2026, though fast-tracking remains a possibility given the political momentum behind the legislation.
| Date | Event | Action for Companies |
|---|---|---|
| 15 April 2026 | Bill tabled in Parliament by the State Minister for Internal Affairs | Begin internal impact assessment; locate and review the bill text; identify corporate exposures. |
| April–May 2026 | Committee referral and public debate (ongoing) | Monitor parliamentary schedule; prepare written submissions or industry engagement if applicable. |
| TBD (if enacted) | Presidential Assent and commencement date gazetted | File registration applications immediately; implement all contract amendments and governance changes within statutory windows. |
Companies should not wait for enactment to begin preparation. The likely practical effect of a fast-track legislative process would be compressed compliance windows, leaving little time for entities that have not already mapped their exposures.
The Bill’s reach is broader than many corporate stakeholders initially assume. The definitions in the early clauses are the critical starting point for any compliance analysis.
The practical consequence for company law changes Uganda practitioners must address is that entities previously considered ordinary commercial vehicles, a locally incorporated subsidiary of a multinational, for instance, may fall within the scope of the Bill if they receive funds or direction from a foreign parent. A facts-based review of each entity’s ownership, funding flows, and governance arrangements is essential to determine whether registration is triggered.
Yes, where an entity or individual meets the Bill’s definition of an “agent of a foreigner,” mandatory registration is required. Clauses 14–20 of the Bill set out the registration framework. Failure to register is a criminal offence.
The step-by-step process contemplated by the Bill is as follows:
| Entity Type | Registration Required? | Key Obligations and Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign-owned private company (locally incorporated) | Likely yes, if acting as agent or receiving foreign funding | Disclose beneficial owners and foreign funders; register as agent of a foreigner if activities fall under definitions; update shareholders’ agreement and board reporting protocols. |
| Branch or representative office | Likely yes | Register branch details and disclose foreign funders; ensure a local responsible person registers; assess whether funding cap applies to branch receipts. |
| NGO / Not-for-profit receiving foreign grants | Yes, explicitly targeted | Must apply for certificate; foreign funding cap applies; ministerial approvals and periodic reporting required; highest enforcement risk. |
| Lender / Bank providing cross-border loans | Depends, may need notification or agent registration | Confirm whether lending triggers “foreign funding” classification; ensure loan documentation includes tax gross-ups and registration covenants. |
Clause 22 of the Bill introduces a cap on foreign funding. Several advisory analyses, including ENS Africa’s firm advisory, report the cap at approximately UGX 400,000,000 (roughly US$106,000) within any 12-month period. Any funding received above this threshold requires prior ministerial approval and triggers enhanced reporting obligations.
Practitioners should note that the reported figure is drawn from the Bill text as tabled and may be amended during committee stage. Companies should verify the final threshold against the enacted law or implementing regulations once gazetted. For entities with multiple foreign funding streams, intercompany loans, management fees, licence royalties, and equity contributions, the aggregate may quickly exceed the cap, making early mapping of funding flows essential.
The Bill creates both criminal and administrative penalties for non-compliance. Based on analysis by local practitioners, the enforcement provisions include the following:
The practical risk for companies is that revocation of a registration certificate, or a criminal prosecution of a director or officer, can halt operations, trigger cross-default provisions in loan agreements, and cause reputational damage. Early compliance is the most effective risk mitigation strategy.
The impact on foreign-owned companies operating in Uganda extends well beyond the registration requirement. The Bill has the potential to reshape board composition, shareholder governance, and beneficial ownership disclosure for any entity with material foreign participation.
Foreign shareholders who exercise, or are deemed to exercise, control over a Ugandan entity may cause that entity to be classified as an “agent of a foreigner.” This applies not only to majority-owned subsidiaries but potentially to joint ventures where a foreign partner holds veto rights, board appointment rights, or approval rights over key decisions. Companies should review shareholders’ agreements and articles of association to determine whether control provisions inadvertently bring the entity within scope.
Foreign directors serving on boards of Ugandan companies must assess whether their involvement triggers the agent-of-a-foreigner classification for the company or for themselves personally. Early indications suggest that boards with a majority of non-citizen directors, or where a foreign parent nominates the majority of directors, are at higher risk of classification. Corporate governance Uganda 2026 best practice will increasingly require documented analysis of director nationality and the governance chain linking the Ugandan board to any foreign parent.
The Bill’s registration process requires disclosure of ultimate beneficial owners. This aligns with, but goes further than, existing beneficial ownership requirements under the Anti-Money Laundering Act and the Companies Act. Companies should ensure their beneficial ownership registers are current, accurate, and reconciled with the information that will be submitted in any registration application.
The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 Uganda does not operate in isolation. Read alongside the 2026 tax amendment proposals currently under consideration, the Bill creates additional complexity for cross-border loan withholding tax 2026 planning and intercompany financing structures.
The Bill’s broad definition of “foreign funding”, which includes money, goods, services, and other economic benefits received from a foreigner, could, on a literal reading, capture intercompany loans, management fees, licence royalties, and technical assistance payments. If such payments are classified as foreign funding, they could trigger registration obligations and count toward the foreign funding cap.
Industry observers expect the Uganda Revenue Authority to clarify whether payments classified as “foreign funding” under the Bill attract different withholding tax treatment. Until URA guidance is published, companies should assume that additional tax exposure is possible and build protective provisions into their financing arrangements. Any entity relying on intercompany loans from foreign affiliates should seek confirmation from URA on the tax treatment of those flows under both the Bill and the 2026 tax amendment proposals.
For lenders and borrowers with Ugandan exposure, the following contractual provisions should be considered:
The most immediate practical impact of the Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 Uganda for transactional lawyers and in-house counsel is the need to remediate existing contracts and update standard-form documentation. Uganda corporate compliance 2026 requirements under the Bill will affect M&A purchase agreements, shareholders’ agreements, facility agreements, and commercial contracts with foreign counterparties.
The following clause bank provides illustrative drafting prompts (these are not a substitute for legal advice tailored to specific transactions):
These provisions are illustrative and should be adapted to the specific transaction, jurisdiction of the counterparty, and governing law of the agreement.
The following operational playbook is designed for internal legal and compliance teams. Timelines assume the Bill could be enacted and commence at short notice.
Within 30 days:
Within 60 days:
Within 90 days:
For M&A advisers, lenders conducting credit assessments, and investors performing pre-investment due diligence on Ugandan targets, the Bill introduces new risk categories. The following due diligence focus areas should be added to standard checklists:
The Protection of Sovereignty Bill 2026 Uganda is not yet law, but its breadth and the pace of legislative activity make proactive compliance planning essential. Companies, investors, and lenders with Ugandan exposure should take three immediate steps: conduct a self-assessment against the Bill’s definitions; audit and remediate contracts, financing documents, and governance structures; and engage experienced Ugandan corporate counsel to prepare registration applications and monitor the legislative timeline. The cost of preparation is modest compared to the commercial and criminal risks of non-compliance once the Bill commences. Those seeking specialist guidance can find a qualified corporate lawyer in Uganda through Global Law Experts.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Frederick Muwema at Muwema & Co Advocates & Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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