Zimbabwe has introduced a new Digital Services Withholding Tax in the 2026 national budget. The levy applies to foreign digital platforms such as Bolt, inDrive, streaming services, cloud providers and Starlink.
It replaces the old VAT on imported digital services. From now on, banks, mobile money operators and other payment intermediaries will withhold the tax whenever Zimbabweans pay for cross border digital products.
Authorities say this closes a long running gap. Global platforms have been earning from the Zimbabwean market without contributing to the local tax base.
Why Zimbabwe is tightening its grip on digital revenue
Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube explained the decision directly in Parliament, saying:
“This tax ensures that Zimbabwe gets its fair share from global digital platforms earning revenue from our market. The digital economy has evolved faster than our tax system and we are now closing that gap.”
The government is under fiscal pressure. Pulling digital platforms into the tax net gives it a new revenue channel.The change may also affect consumers. Some platforms might absorb the levy. Others may increase prices for ride hailing, streaming or satellite internet.
How users, platforms and payment providers will feel the change
Anyone paying for digital services could be affected once companies update their billing systems. Ride hailing fares may move slightly. Streaming and cloud subscriptions may shift.
Foreign platforms must now register for compliance or work with local intermediaries to make sure the right tax is withheld.
Payment providers are now central. Banks, fintechs and mobile money services must capture and remit the tax as transactions flow through their systems.
ZIMRA Commissioner Misheck Govha made the enforcement stance clear, stating:
“We have no one we are going to leave behind as far as registration is concerned, for those who are BNBs and inDrive.”
The rollout phase that determines what happens next
The Ministry of Finance will release implementation guidelines over the next few weeks. These will explain how offshore platforms should register and how payment intermediaries should process the tax.
Early signals will come from mobile money operators and digital platforms once they announce price changes or compliance steps.
How smoothly banks and fintechs adapt their systems, and how global players respond, will determine whether the new tax settles quickly or triggers wider market adjustments.












