Tanzania Approves National Budget for 2024/25: Execution to Start Monday 1st July

Mwigulu Nchemba Tanzania Budget Speech 2024-2025

On June 26th, 2024, Tanzania’s National Assembly overwhelmingly approved the national budget for the fiscal year 2024/2025, with 362 out of 383 Members of Parliament voting in favor of it.

The comprehensive budget, amounting to TZS 49.35 trillion (USD 18.85 billion), marks an 11.2% increase from the previous year, driven by a combination of factors including the depreciation of the Tanzanian shilling, rising interest rates, and the maturation of loans.

A key highlight of this year’s budget is the government’s reforms in the tax structure, fees, levies, and amendment of laws and regulations to improve the business environment. The reforms that have been proposed relating to the industrial sector are in the VAT, excise duty, fees and charges of agencies as well as import duty.

Tanzania Investment Guide 2026 Free Edition

Tanzania’s Finance Minister Mwigulu Nchemba stressed that the budget seeks to create an enabling environment for the private sector while also taking on board various concerns that were raised by lawmakers when debating the budget.

“All views expressed by the Budget Committee, as well as those of individual legislators on the Finance Bill have been considered,” Dr Nchemba stated in Parliament.

The Confederation of Tanzania Industries (CTI), the foremost organization representing the industrial sector in Tanzania, applauded some of the measures while highlighting areas in the budget that risk having a negative impact on industrial development. A full analysis is available here.

The budget execution will start on Monday 1st July 2024.

Want to know more about the Economy in Tanzania? Our free overview of the Tanzania Business and Investment Guide 2026 covers the Economy, plus key sectors and investment opportunities. The complete 141-page edition includes policies, taxation, key regulations, full macroeconomic data, and sources.

Download Free OverviewGet the Full Guide
Related Posts
Tanzania Khamis Mussa Omar Parliament bunge
Read More

Tanzania Finance Bill 2026 Drops Agricultural Withholding Tax, Softens Used Car Duties and Cuts SME Presumptive Tax to 4%, Effective 1 July 2026

Tanzania’s Finance Bill 2026, presented to Parliament on 24 June 2026 by Finance Minister Ambassador Khamis Mussa Omar, takes effect on 1 July 2026 and amends 26 laws to implement the 2026/27 budget tax measures. The Parliamentary Budget Committee dropped the proposed 1% withholding tax on agricultural produce, the proposed 5% excise on motorcycles and on gambling stakes, softened excise duties on imported used vehicles, cut the SME presumptive tax to 4.0% from 4.5%, confirmed mining Framework Agreement tax incentives during the construction phase, and introduced a new 0.5% stamp duty on agricultural land transfers.
TanzaniaInvest Interview FAyaz Bhojani Managing Partner FB Attorneys
Read More

Interview with Dr FAyaz Bhojani, Managing Partner of FB Attorneys, on the Evolution of the Firm, and Litigation, Arbitration and Taxation Issues in Tanzania

TanzaniaInvest interviewed Dr FAyaz Bhojani, Managing Partner of FB Attorneys, the only law firm in Tanzania ranked at the top by all three leading international legal directories, Chambers and Partners, IFLR1000, and The Legal 500. He discusses the firm’s cross-border and arbitration work, its strength in mining, oil and gas, and M&A, and the two factors foreign investors weigh most before entering Tanzania: the rule of law and a fair, predictable tax system.
Juma Malik Akil Zanzibar Budget 2026-2027 House of Representatives
Read More

Zanzibar Passes 2026/2027 Budget of TZS 8.52 Trillion, Targeting 7.5% GDP Growth, Stock Exchange Launch, and Investment Priority on Tourism, the Blue Economy, and SMEs

Zanzibar passed a TZS 8.52 trillion (± USD 3.28 billion) budget for 2026/27, a 22.11% increase, targeting 7.5% economic growth and reducing external financing dependence to 2.8% as tourist arrivals rose 21.9% to 800,968. Priority sectors are tourism, agriculture, fisheries, small and medium enterprises and the blue economy, with investor measures including the planned launch of a Zanzibar stock exchange, raw materials relief for small and medium manufacturers outside ZIPA, and a 25% stamp duty cut on commercial vehicles.