Botswana’s proposed Income Tax Bill represents the most comprehensive reworking of the income tax system in decades. It does not simply adjust rates or tidy up wording. It reshapes how income is identified, when tax becomes payable, who must collect it, and how aggressively it can be enforced.
For many taxpayers, the risk is not paying more tax, it is failing to realise that the rules they have relied on for years are no longer safe assumptions.
This publication is not a clause-by-clause commentary. It focuses on the changes that will:
- affect cash flow,
- change transaction timing,
- expand compliance obligations,
- or increase exposure where taxpayers previously felt comfortable.
If a change does not do one of those things, it is not discussed here.
1. What the Bill Is Really Doing
Before getting into specifics, it is important to understand the direction of the reform.
The Bill moves Botswana’s income tax system toward:
- clearer, more rule-based outcomes, and
- less reliance on informal practice or interpretation.
This is not about making the law harsher. It is about making it easier to apply and easier to enforce. Where there were gaps, silence, or ambiguity, the Bill fills them. Where timing was flexible, it is tightened. Where enforcement relied on discretion, it is formalised.
That shift underpins all the changes discussed below.
2. Personal Income Tax: No New Relief, but Higher Exposure at the Top
A new top marginal rate for higher earners. Where the Bill does introduce change at the top end of the income scale.
A 27.5% marginal rate applies to taxable income above P400,000, for both resident and non-resident individuals.
Why this matters
- High earners will see increased tax on the top slice of income.
- PAYE tables will need updating once the Bill becomes law.
- Executive pay structures, bonuses, and incentive schemes may need review.
This change is unlikely to affect most employees, but it is significant for:
- executives,
- professionals,
- consultants,
- owner-managers.
It signals a policy choice: higher personal incomes will carry a higher tax burden.
3. Withholding Tax: The Quiet Expansion That Will Catch Many Off-Guard
If there is one area where the Bill will create the most unplanned exposure, it is withholding tax.
This is not because rates are dramatically changing, but because more payments are now clearly within scope.
Many payments now clearly require withholding
The Bill expands and clarifies withholding obligations. Payments that now require withholding include:
- insurance premiums paid to non-residents (5%),
- capital gains paid to non-residents (10%),
- repatriated branch profits (10%),
- director’s fees to non-residents (15%),
- natural resource payments to non-residents (15%),
- payment to entertainer (10%),
Why this matters in practice
This change affects operations, not just tax planning:
- Businesses may become withholding agents without realising it.
- Failing to withhold is no longer arguable, it is a clear compliance failure.
- Contracts may need to be renegotiated to deal with tax being deducted at source.
Accounts payable, procurement, and finance teams will need to understand tax in ways they may not have before.
4. Companies and Businesses: More Certainty, Less Flexibility
Company tax rates: clearer presentation
The Bill clearly states:
- a general company tax rate of 24.5%,
- specific treatment for IFSC companies 17.5% or 24.5%,
- separate treatment for mutual associations and trusts.
For many companies, the headline tax outcome may not change. What changes is how much discretion remains.
Losses and restructurings face tighter boundaries
The Income Tax Bill reframes and tightens the loss utilisation rules across all sectors, moving away from sector-specific assumptions toward a more consistent, rule-based approach.
In particular, the Bill:
- places clearer conditions on when losses may be utilised,
- links loss utilisation more directly to continuity of ownership and activity,
- introduces explicit treatment of losses in the context of incorporations, reorganisations, and intra-group transfers, and
- reduces the scope for losses to be preserved or transferred purely through restructuring.
What this means
The Bill tightens and standardises loss carry-forward rules. While indefinite loss carry-forward was historically a feature of mining taxation, the Bill moves away from sector-specific assumptions and introduces clearer conditions around how and when losses may be utilised, particularly following ownership changes or restructurings. Group reorganisations that once felt routine will now require:
- clearer planning,
- stronger documentation,
- early tax input.
The Bill does not prohibit restructuring, but it raises the standard.
5. Cross-Border Income and Permanent Establishment Risk
Wider PE exposure
The Bill strengthens and clarifies permanent establishment concepts. Certain activities that previously sat in grey areas may now trigger Botswana taxing rights more easily.
This is particularly relevant for:
- construction and installation projects,
- service providers operating in Botswana for extended periods,
- regional hubs and project offices
Foreign income and relief
The Bill clarifies:
- how foreign tax credits are calculated,
- how foreign losses can be used (and limited),
- how technical fees and royalties charged between group companies are treated,
- how profits repatriated from Botswana branches are taxed,
- how tax treaties interact with domestic law.
For multinational groups, this means:
- fewer gaps to rely on,
- greater emphasis on documentation and substance,
- more predictable outcomes, but higher compliance expectations.
6. Industry-Specific Focus: Insurance and Mining
Insurance
The Bill maintains separate treatment for:
- long-term insurance, and
- general insurance,
but reduces room for informal interpretation around:
- reserves,
- timing of income,
- cross-border reinsurance flows.
Insurers should expect more structured audits and less tolerance for informal practice.
Mining and extractive industries
Mining receives one of the most detailed treatments in the Bill, including:
- project-by-project ring-fencing,
- specific rules for prospecting, development, and rehabilitation expenditure,
- treatment of farm-out arrangements,
- taxation of indirect disposals of mining interests,
- limits on excessive interest deductions.
The message is clear: large, high-value industries will be governed by detailed, enforceable rules.
7. Capital Gains Tax: Clearer Rules and Earlier Tax Payments
Capital Gains Tax (CGT) has always existed in Botswana, but it has often been difficult to navigate in practice. The Bill changes that fundamentally.
Capital gains get their own rules
Under the Bill:
- CGT is dealt with in its own dedicated part of the law.
- The way gains are calculated, grouped, and taxed is explained step by step.
- There is a specific rate table for individuals’ capital gains, separate from normal salary or business income.
This makes CGT easier to understand, but also harder to avoid
What this means in practice: timing becomes critical
The most significant CGT change is not the rate, it is when the tax must be paid.
Property sales, share disposals, and business exits may now require tax to be settled before proceeds are fully released. In real terms:
- Transactions may require escrow or retention arrangements.
- Sale proceeds may be partially withheld pending tax settlement.
- Cash-flow planning becomes essential during deal structuring.
This affects:
- property developers and investors,
- shareholders exiting businesses,
- group reorganisations involving asset transfers.
The days of “sorting out CGT later” are effectively over.
8. Anti-Avoidance and Enforcement: Fewer Arguments, More Evidence
The Bill strengthens the tax authority’s ability to challenge arrangements by introducing:
- specific income-splitting rules,
- clearer transfer pricing adjustment powers,
- targeted measures against low-tax structures,
- the ability to unwind artificial arrangements.
This does not mean every structure is suspect. It does mean that documentation, commercial rationale, and substance matter more than clever drafting.
A few important New Provisions Worth Paying Attention To!!
While much of the Income Tax Bill focuses on structure and consolidation, several specific provisions represent genuine shifts in how tax law will apply in practice. These are not headline-grabbing changes, but they carry real consequences for certain taxpayers and transactions.
1. The Act Is Now Expressly Binding on the State
One of the more subtle but important provisions in the Bill is the express statement that the Income Tax Act binds the State.
Why this matters
Historically, tax legislation has often been applied to private taxpayers without explicitly stating whether the State itself is subject to the same rules. This has occasionally created uncertainty around:
- government-owned entities,
- special purpose vehicles established by the State,
- transactions involving ministries or statutory bodies.
By stating clearly that the Act binds the State, the Bill removes that ambiguity.
What changes in practice
- Government entities are less able to argue exemption by implication.
- State-owned or State-controlled entities are expected to comply with the same charging, reporting, and withholding rules unless an explicit exemption applies.
- Transactions involving the State will increasingly be analysed on ordinary tax principles, not assumed immunity.
This provision strengthens the principle of tax neutrality between public and private actors.
2. Fair Market Value: A Central Concept, Not a Side Note
The Bill elevates fair market value from a scattered concept into a central rule that applies across multiple parts of the Act.
What this means
Where transactions occur between related parties, connected persons, or under non-commercial terms, tax outcomes will increasingly be determined by what the transaction would have been worth between independent parties.
Why this matters
Fair market value now plays a clearer role in:
- asset transfers,
- restructurings,
- non-cash benefits,
- employee share arrangements,
- related-party dealings.
3. Employee Share Scheme Benefits: Brought Clearly into the Tax Net
Employee share schemes are increasingly used to attract and retain talent, particularly at senior and specialist levels. Under the current law, their tax treatment has often been unclear or inconsistently applied.
The Bill addresses this directly.
What changes
Employee share scheme benefits are now:
- expressly recognised as a form of employment-related income, and
- brought within the taxable income framework with clearer rules.
What this means for employers and employees
- Share awards, options, and similar benefits are no longer easily characterised as “capital” or deferred indefinitely.
- The timing of taxation becomes more predictable, but also less flexible.
- Employers may have additional reporting or withholding obligations depending on how schemes are structured.
Why this matters
Businesses that rely on equity-based incentives will need to:
- review existing schemes,
- reassess tax timing,
- ensure documentation aligns with the new treatment.
This change reduces uncertainty, but it also closes off planning strategies that relied on silence or ambiguity.
4. Limitation on Interest Deduction: Debt Is No Longer Always Efficient
The Bill introduces a clearer limitation on interest deductions, particularly where businesses are highly leveraged.
The policy shift
Debt has traditionally been a tax-efficient way to finance businesses because interest is deductible. The Bill places firmer boundaries around this principle.
What changes
Interest deductions are now subject to:
- defined limits linked to earnings and interest income,
- restrictions that apply regardless of whether the lender is local or foreign,
- carry-forward rules for disallowed interest in certain cases.
What this means in practice
- Highly geared businesses may no longer be able to deduct all interest paid.
- Shareholder loan structures need closer scrutiny.
- Financing decisions will increasingly be driven by commercial needs, not tax efficiency alone.
This provision aligns with global trends aimed at preventing excessive debt-driven profit shifting.
Closely related to interest limitation is the Bill’s treatment of thin capitalisation, particularly relevant to:
5. Thin Capitalisation: A Clear Warning to Over-Leveraged Structures
- multinational groups,
- mining and extractive projects,
- capital-intensive ventures funded largely by debt.
What changes
The Bill gives clearer authority to restrict interest deductions where a business is:
- funded with disproportionately high levels of debt compared to equity, or
- structured in a way that shifts profits out of Botswana through financing costs.
Why this matters
- Debt-heavy structures that once “worked” may now produce higher effective tax costs.
- Group treasury arrangements will need to demonstrate commercial justification.
- Mining and project finance structures should expect increased scrutiny.
The message is straightforward: Botswana will tax profits where economic activity occurs, not where interest is parked.
6. Mutual Associations: Finally Given Clear Tax Treatment
Mutual associations have historically occupied an awkward space in tax law, often treated differently depending on facts and interpretation.
The Bill addresses this by expressly recognising mutual associations and setting out their tax treatment.
What this means
- Mutual associations are no longer left to inference or informal treatment.
- Their tax position is stated clearly, including applicable rates.
- Compliance expectations become more predictable.
Why this matters
For entities such as clubs, associations, and member-based organisations:
- tax outcomes become easier to explain and defend,
- disputes based on “special status” arguments become less viable,
- governance and compliance expectations increase.
This change is about certainty, not necessarily higher tax.
7.Currency Translation: Less Flexibility, More Consistency
The Bill introduces clearer rules on:
- which exchange rate must be used, and
- when foreign currency amounts must be translated into Pula for tax purposes.
In effect, it reduces the scope for taxpayers to choose translation methods that produce more favourable tax outcomes.
Why this matters
Currency movements can materially affect taxable income, particularly for:
- importers and exporters,
- businesses with foreign suppliers or customers,
- groups with cross-border loans or service arrangements,
- companies holding foreign currency balance
8. Self-Withholding: When the Taxpayer Becomes the Collector
Traditionally, withholding tax is associated with someone else deducting tax before you are paid. The Bill broadens this idea by requiring certain taxpayers to withhold tax on themselves in specific circumstances.
What self-withholding means
Self-withholding requires a taxpayer to:
- calculate the tax due on a payment or amount,
- deduct that tax upfront, and
- pay it directly to the tax authority, even though no third party is involved.
This shifts responsibility firmly onto the taxpayer.
Why this matters
Self-withholding applies in situations where:
- income is received without a clear withholding agent,
- payments come from outside Botswana,
- or the structure of the transaction would otherwise escape withholding altogether.
Examples include:
- certain non-resident income streams,
- cross-border service or management fees,
- arrangements where the payer is not subject to Botswana withholding rules.
Why These Provisions Matter Collectively
Each of these sections may appear technical in isolation. Taken together, they tell a clear story.
The Income Tax Bill:
- reduces reliance on implied exemptions,
- focuses on value rather than form,
- narrows planning opportunities based on silence,
- and raises the standard for documentation and justification.
For most taxpayers, this will not mean paying dramatically more tax. It will mean being more deliberate, more prepared, and more defensible.
Procedure, Compliance, and Administration: Where Risk Quietly Increases
By tying income tax more closely to the Tax Administration Act, the Bill:
- strengthens recovery powers,
- tightens record-keeping requirements,
- expands self-assessment obligations,
- increases responsibility for representatives and trustees.
Many future disputes will arise not from technical tax positions, but from:
- missing records,
- late payments,
- incorrect withholding,
- weak audit trails.
This is where many taxpayers will feel the impact first.
What Should Taxpayers Do Now?
Even before the Bill becomes law, preparation matters.
Key actions to consider
- Employers: review PAYE exposure for high earners.
- Businesses: map every payment against the expanded withholding list.
- Property owners and investors: plan for upfront CGT.
- Groups: reassess cross-border fees, royalties, and financing.
Final Thought
The Income Tax Bill does not dramatically increase tax across the board. What it does is reduce ambiguity. And when ambiguity disappears, risk shifts.
For taxpayers who prepare early, the changes are manageable.
For those who rely on habit, assumption, or silence in the law, the cost of getting tax wrong will rise, quietly, but decisively.

by Nomsa Manele
Section RIC – Tax
