South Africa’s 2026 Budget will focus on whether VAT can keep pace with a digitised economy rather than on rate hikes. A proposed two‑percentage‑point increase was tabled and rejected in 2025, and the Finance Minister confirmed that VAT rate increases for 2025/26 and 2026/27 have been dropped. The Treasury is examining how digital services supplied by foreign providers are taxed and whether the current framework captures modern consumption.
A two‑percentage‑point VAT increase was tabled in 2025 but was rejected, causing a delay in the Budget process.
The Budget Speech is scheduled for 25 February 2026.
Over the past 12 years, South Africa introduced three amendments that broadened definitions, expanded registration requirements, and widened the net to ensure VAT follows the end‑consumer of digital services.
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VatCalc · 5 days ago
South African Revenue Services (SARS) is preparing to launch a mandatory e‑invoicing model, with full operational capability targeted for 2028. The initiative builds on the 2025 Draft Tax Administration Laws Amendment Bill and will include e‑invoicing, e‑reporting and a Peppol‑based interoperability framework. A phased rollout is planned for 2026‑2027, with stakeholder engagement and framework publication before the 2028 launch.
LinkedIn Article by Willem O. · 20 days ago
The South African Tax Court ruled that government funding is taxable when it is paid in exchange for identifiable services, regardless of the label ‘grant’. The decision focuses on commercial reality—formal agreements, deliverables, invoicing and performance oversight—rather than organisational form or public‑benefit objectives. Accounting classifications do not override VAT characterisation, underscoring the need for careful governance and early tax input.
VatCalc · about 17 hours ago
Cameroon’s 2026 Finance Law introduces a real‑time VAT e‑invoicing regime that will require all taxpayers to use approved electronic invoicing solutions. The new mandate builds on the 2024 Finance Law’s electronic tracking requirements for selected sectors and aims to shift tax control from post‑filing audit to transaction‑level visibility.
Bloomberg Tax · 1 day ago
The Ivorian tax authority released the annex to the 2026 Finance Law, introducing several tax changes. Measures include extending a 7.5% withholding tax on non‑commercial profits for certain non‑salaried participants, eliminating VAT exemptions for oil exploration, agriculture, manufacturing and packaging and applying the standard 18% VAT rate, raising the tourism development tax to 2.5% from 1.5%, imposing a tax on foreign digital service platforms without a physical presence, and reducing the property tax to 13% from 15%.
ATAF · 5 days ago
ATAF presented African viewpoints on VAT treatment of crypto assets and internationally traded services at the OECD Global Forum on VAT in Paris. The presentations highlighted practical, implementable approaches, clear VAT models for token exchange, and the development of a regional toolkit for non‑resident suppliers. The event underscored the importance of regional coordination and stakeholder engagement to align African realities with global VAT policy.
VatCalc · 10 days ago
Liberia will replace its existing 12% Goods and Services Tax (GST) with an 18% Value Added Tax (VAT) regime effective 1 January 2027. The GST will be increased to 13% from 1 January 2026, and businesses can begin VAT registration from 1 July 2026. The new VAT will allow input tax deductions, eliminating the cascading effect of the current GST.