Home » Africa: Tanzania Slashes Tourism Budget by $107.6 Million, Raising Concern Among Industry Stakeholders

Africa: Tanzania Slashes Tourism Budget by $107.6 Million, Raising Concern Among Industry Stakeholders

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Tanzania Slashes Tourism Budget

Tanzania’s tourism industry has raised alarm over a significant $107.6 million budget cut to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism for the 2025/26 fiscal year.

The allocation was reduced from $230 million to $122.4 million, a move stakeholders warn could derail efforts to boost visitor numbers and undermine long-term sector growth.

According to theeastafrican.co.ke, this is despite tourism sector earning Tanzania $3.9 billion in 2024, becoming the highest forex earner for the country. 

TCT said in a statement the country will struggle to implement its marketing plans and expanding key enablers for tourism.  

“This trend undermines the long-term sustainability of the ecosystems and wildlife that are the foundation of Tanzania’s global tourism competitiveness,” the TCT statement said.

READ: Africa: Tanzania Reaps $3.9 Billion from 5.5M Tourists in 2025 as Domestic and International Visitor Numbers Surge from 1.7M in 2021

Tanzania lowered its budget from the initial figure of Tsh57.04 trillion ($22.09 billion) to Tsh56.49 trillion ($21.88 billion), according to figures tabled by Finance minister Mwigulu Nchemba.

For tourism, players say there shouldn’t have been a cut. Nature-based tourism accounts for over 70 percent of Tanzania’s annual tourism earnings, sourced from tourists visiting wildlife parks and other nature protected areas, beaches, historical and cultural heritage sites.

READ: Africa: Tanzanian Tour Operators Call for One Year Delay on Mandatory Travel Insurance for Foreign Tourists to Avoid Booking Disruptions

TCT also listed the 10 percent withholding tax imposed on tourism retained earnings as a harmful tax on reinvesting in upgrades, expansion and staffing. It further argued that foreign exchange controls would also prevent operators from quoting and settling their charges on dollar and euro, a situation which is critical for pre-bookings and packaged group tours. 

The government has imposed a control on local transactions using the dollar with a directive to Tanzanian companies, including tour operators, to stick to the shilling. Under the new regulations by the Bank of Tanzania, tourists should use Tanzanian shilling to pay for services.

The confederation’s CEO Lathifa Sykes said that it was curious that the government allocated a big budget for development of infrastructure to host the African Cup of Nations (Afcon) in 2027, but overlooked tourism-related businesses, which would shoulder the logistical burden of the continental event.

“You know the situation which hotels, transport companies, tour operators and cultural providers would face without getting support to upgrade or scale up their services in preparation for the 2027 tournament?” she posed. 

Dr Nchemba allocated Tsh574.8 billion ($221 million) for the preparations of Afcon 2027, with Tsh179.8 billion ($69 million) to be spent for renovation of stadiums in Dar es Salaam and Arusha. 

Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda have been selected to jointly host the Afcon games between June and July 2027. 

TCT had proposed the establishment of National Conservation Trust Fund, which would mobilse three to five percent of total tourism earnings, then eliminate the current taxes and levies, including the tourist development and bed night levies.

Some 5.3 million tourists visited Tanzania in 2024, official figures show.

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