Africa's Digital Tax Framework Explained: VAT, DST, SEP, and Withholding Tax
Summary
Africa's digital economy has expanded rapidly, driven by increased mobile internet and platform-based business models, and is projected to contribute up to 5.2% of GDP by 2025, representing a growing tax base that governments are eager to capture.
Tax authorities have constructed layered digital tax regimes that typically combine Value Added Tax (VAT) on electronic services with one or more additional instruments: Digital Services Taxes (DSTs) on gross revenue, Significant Economic Presence (SEP) rules extending corporate income tax nexus, and Withholding Taxes (WHT) on service payments.
The simultaneous application of these four pillars to the same revenue stream creates a fragmented, costly, and legally uncertain compliance environment for non-resident digital service providers, a situation compounded by the rapid pace of legislative change, such as the transition from DST to WHT in Uganda and SEP in Kenya.
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Africa's digital economy has expanded rapidly over the past decade, driven by rising mobile internet penetration, the spread of smartphone adoption, and the emergence of platform-based business models across sectors ranging from streaming and e-commerce to fintech and cloud services. According to the International Finance Corporation (IFC), Africa's digital economy could contribute up to 5.2% of GDP by 2025, representing a substantial and growing tax base that governments are increasingly eager to capture.
In response, tax authorities across the continent have constructed layered digital tax regimes. These typically combine Value Added Tax (VAT) on electronic services levied on a destination basis with one or more additional instruments: Digital Services Taxes (DSTs) on gross revenue, Significant Economic Presence (SEP) rules extending corporate income tax nexus, and withholding taxes on service payments to non-resident providers.
While each instrument serves a distinct policy purpose, their simultaneous application to the same revenue stream creates a fragmented, costly, and often legally uncertain compliance environment.
The Four Pillars of Africa's Digital Tax Framework
To understand where overlaps occur, it is necessary to first understand the four primary instruments that African governments deploy, often in combination.
VAT on Digital Services
The most widely adopted instrument across Africa is VAT extended to cover electronically supplied services delivered by non-resident providers. These regimes are modeled on the OECD's destination-based approach, meaning the country of the consumer determines where VAT is due. Non-resident suppliers must register for VAT, charge VAT on supplies to local consumers, file periodic returns, and remit tax to the relevant authority.
As of 2025–2026, active VAT regimes covering foreign digital services are in place in: South Africa (since 2014), Kenya, Tanzania, Nigeria, Uganda, Ghana, Zambia, Ethiopia, Senegal, Cameroon, Togo, Mozambique, Botswana, Mauritius, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Niger, Burkina Faso, Benin, and the Republic of the Congo (effective July 2026), among others. The rapid proliferation of these regimes with several launches between 2024 and 2026 means that the list of active registration obligations is expanding almost every quarter.
Digital Services Taxes (DSTs)
DSTs are gross-revenue levies applied specifically to digital businesses. Unlike VAT, which is a consumption tax recoverable along the supply chain, a DST is a cost to the supplier: it applies regardless of whether the business is profitable in that jurisdiction. Several African countries introduced DSTs as interim revenue-capture measures while awaiting global corporate tax reform under the OECD's Inclusive Framework.
DST rates and statuses vary significantly across the continent: Tanzania levies a 2% DST on digital services; Zimbabwe applies a 5% DST on gross receipts from digital transactions; Rwanda's Finance Act 2025 introduced a 1.5% DST on digital service revenues. Kenya abolished its 1.5% DST in December 2024 and replaced it with a Significant Economic Presence tax, while Uganda moved away from its 5% DST in July 2025, substituting it with a 15% withholding tax on payments to non-resident providers. These transitions illustrate how quickly the landscape shifts, adding monitoring complexity for businesses active across multiple markets.
Significant Economic Presence (SEP) Rules
SEP rules represent a structural evolution beyond DSTs. They extend corporate income tax nexus to non-resident businesses that derive significant revenue from a jurisdiction through digital means, even without a physical presence. SEP is a profit-based or deemed-profit mechanism, meaning it integrates digital activity into the mainstream income tax framework rather than applying a separate levy.
Among the most developed SEP regimes on the continent are Kenya, Nigeria, Cameroon, and the Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire).
Kenya
Following the Tax Laws (Amendment) Act 2024, Kenya replaced its DST with a SEP rule under the Income Tax Act. Non-resident digital service providers whose gross turnover from Kenyan users exceeds KES 5 million (approximately USD 38,700) in any year are deemed to have a taxable presence. Tax is applied on a deemed net profit of 20% of gross revenue, with the income tax rate of 30% applying, yielding an effective rate of approximately 6% of gross revenue compared to the former 1.5% DST. The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has published draft regulations to operationalize reporting and registration under this framework.
Nigeria
The Finance Act 2019 first introduced SEP provisions, later refined by subsequent Finance Acts. Non-resident companies providing digital, technical, management, or consultancy services to Nigerian customers are subject to corporate income tax where annual turnover from Nigeria exceeds NGN 25 million (approximately USD 16,000). Nigeria uses a deemed profit approach under which the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) determines the attributable profit based on the nature of the service. Unlike Kenya's fixed 20% deemed net, Nigeria's attribution is more flexible but consequently less predictable.
Cameroon
Under the 2026 Finance Law, Cameroon introduced SEP provisions that subject non-resident digital service providers to corporate income tax where their annual revenues from Cameroonian users exceed XAF 50 million (approximately USD 82,000). Cameroon has retained its existing VAT obligation on electronic services alongside the new SEP rule, creating a dual registration requirement for qualifying non-residents.
Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire)
The 2024 Finance Law established SEP rules that apply a 30% deemed profit rate on Ivorian-sourced digital revenues for qualifying non-residents, creating one of the highest effective SEP tax rates on the continent when combined with the standard corporate income tax rate.
Withholding Tax on Digital Payments
Withholding tax (WHT) is applied by the local payer, typically a business, when making payments to non-resident service providers. WHT operates as a prepayment or final tax against the non-resident's income tax liability, depending on the jurisdiction. In practice, it shifts the compliance burden to the local counterparty while still creating reporting obligations for the non-resident recipient.
Several notable transitions illustrate the current direction of travel:
Uganda replaced its 5% DST with a 15% withholding tax on payments to non-resident digital service providers effective July 2025, under the Income Tax (Amendment) Act 2025. The shift from gross DST to WHT means local business payers now bear the deduction and remittance obligation, while significantly increasing the headline rate applied to such payments.
Ghana applies a 5% WHT on payments for digital services delivered by non-residents under the Income Tax Act 2015 (as amended), in addition to VAT obligations under the Ghana Revenue Authority’s electronic services framework.
Nigerian businesses making B2B payments to non-resident digital and technical service providers may be subject to WHT deductions under the Companies Income Tax Act, in addition to the payer's own VAT compliance obligations where the reverse charge applies.
Conclusion
Africa's digital tax landscape is no longer defined by a single instrument but by an interlocking set of obligations that can apply simultaneously to the same revenue stream. Understanding the four pillars and how they interact is the essential first step for any non-resident digital service provider assessing its exposure across the continent.
The pace of legislative change, with new regimes launching and existing ones transitioning almost every quarter, means that a framework understood today may look materially different by the next Finance Act season. An upcoming article will provide a detailed country-by-country breakdown of digital services taxation across Africa.
Sources: Kenya Revenue Authority – SEP, OECD Pillar One, GRA Ghana, Uganda Income Tax Amendment Act 2025
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