South Africa’s National Treasury is unlikely to raise the VAT rate for Budget 2026/27, citing political resistance. Instead, the focus will shift to enforcement and administrative reforms to strengthen the VAT system. A R20 bn tax increase pencilled in for 2026/27 is also expected to be reconsidered based on Sars performance.
No, PwC predicts that no significant VAT changes will be made for Budget 2026/27 due to political resistance.
The Treasury will strengthen enforcement, implement administrative refinements, and pursue VAT modernisation instead of a rate hike.
A R20 bn increase was pencilled in for Budget 2026/27, but it is likely to be dropped.
Treasury will monitor Sars’ cash collection from debt; if it achieves an additional R20 bn in 2025/26, the tax increase may be reconsidered.
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KPMG · 10 days ago
South Africa’s tax authority, SARS, has confirmed a multi‑year plan to roll out mandatory e‑invoicing and real‑time VAT digital reporting. The phased approach will begin with system design and pilot engagement through 2026, followed by onboarding of large VAT taxpayers and priority sectors between 2026 and 2029. The reform aims to transform VAT administration into a seamless, data‑driven process where compliance is automated and risk is detected at the point of transaction.
Daily Investor · 14 days ago
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.
VatCalc · 18 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. · about 1 month 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.
NigeriaInfo · 5 days ago
Nigeria’s 2025 Tax Act removes VAT on land, completed buildings, and both residential and commercial rent, effective January 2026. The reform allows contractors to recover input VAT on construction materials and gives tenants rent relief up to ₦500,000, capped at 20 % of annual rent. Mortgage interest for owner‑occupied homes remains tax‑deductible.
The Nation · 6 days ago
Nigeria’s Tax Act 2025 has fully exempted land, buildings and rent from Value Added Tax, aiming to lower housing costs and stimulate real‑estate investment. The law also reduces construction withholding tax to 2 % and allows mortgage interest on owner‑occupied homes to be deducted. Additional reliefs include rent relief up to ₦500,000 and various tax incentives for small businesses and real‑estate investors.