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Restaurant licence in Rwanda — what you need in 2026

Every regulatory layer between *I want to open a restaurant* and *I am open* in Rwanda 2026 — RDB business registration, district trading licence, RRA tax setup, FDA food-safety certification, alcohol licence, fire-safety inspection, and the working timeline for the full set.

Tuyizere · Reporter on business, coffee and the Rwandan commercial landscape.Published 8 min read
Mr Chips in Kibagabaga — the kind of casual-dining restaurant that worked its way through every Rwandan restaurant-licensing layer to reach 560 reviews
Photo via Mr Chips

Opening a restaurant in Rwanda involves multiple regulatory layers — none of them onerous individually, but you need to know which ones apply and the order to tackle them. The full set runs to seven distinct approvals between I want to open and the doors are open to the public. This is the working 2026 walkthrough.

The seven approvals in order

  1. RDB business registration — incorporation, TIN, RSSB number
  2. Premises lease or ownership documentation registered with the district
  3. District trading licence for restaurant/catering activity
  4. RRA tax setup — VAT registration if applicable, EBM activation
  5. Rwanda FDA food-safety certification for the premises
  6. Alcohol licence (only if serving alcohol)
  7. Fire-safety inspection and certification from Rwanda National Police

Step 1 — RDB business registration

Standard incorporation via rdb.rw. Choose Ltd if you have any liability concerns; sole proprietorship works for the simplest single-owner operations. The sector code is Restaurants and mobile food services (ISIC 561). Process takes 6-12 working hours; cost is free.

Step 2 — premises documentation

You need a real Rwandan address with proper documentation:

  • Long-term commercial lease (1+ year preferred) registered with the district office
  • Or ownership documentation if you own the property
  • Land/building use compliance — confirm the property is zoned for commercial restaurant use; some residential plots require special permission

Step 3 — district trading licence

Every commercial business in Rwanda needs a trading licence from the district where it operates. For restaurants this is issued by your district office — Gasabo, Nyarugenge, or Kicukiro for Kigali businesses.

  • Application: District office One-Stop Centre
  • Documents required: RDB certificate, TIN, lease/ownership documentation, business plan summary
  • Cost: RWF 60,000-200,000 annually depending on restaurant size and category
  • Renewable: Annually
  • Processing time: 5-10 working days

Step 4 — RRA tax setup

Your TIN was issued at RDB registration. For a restaurant:

  • EBM activation — restaurants must issue receipts through an Electronic Billing Machine. Apply via rra.gov.rw. Time: 2-5 working days.
  • VAT registration — mandatory above RWF 20 million annual turnover. Most established restaurants register voluntarily because their suppliers' VAT becomes reclaimable.
  • Trading licence renewal sync — annual.

Step 5 — Rwanda FDA food-safety certification

Every food-serving establishment in Rwanda needs Rwanda Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) certification. This is what most owners underestimate — the inspection is real and standards are taken seriously.

  • Application: Rwanda FDA (rfdg.rfda.rw or in-person at FDA HQ in Kacyiru)
  • Required: RDB certificate, premises layout drawing, water-supply documentation, waste-management plan, food-handler health certificates for all kitchen staff
  • Inspection: Site visit by FDA inspectors covering kitchen layout, refrigeration, water source, ventilation, waste systems, handwashing stations, food storage
  • Cost: RWF 30,000-150,000 depending on restaurant size and category
  • Time: 2-4 weeks typical from application to certificate
  • Renewable: Annually with re-inspection

Step 6 — alcohol licence (if serving)

If you'll serve any alcohol — beer, wine, spirits — you need an alcohol licence from the district. Without it you can't legally serve, sell, or store alcohol on the premises.

  • Where to apply: District One-Stop Centre
  • Required documents: RDB certificate, district trading licence, FDA certification, premises lease, manager's clean criminal record
  • Cost: RWF 100,000-500,000 annually depending on category (on-licence for consumption on premises, off-licence for sealed-bottle sales)
  • Time: 2-4 weeks typical processing
  • Renewable: Annually
  • Practical note: Restaurants serving alcohol mostly use the on-licence; supermarkets and shops use the off-licence

Step 7 — fire-safety inspection

Restaurants — particularly those with kitchen gas systems, multiple stories, or large customer capacities — require fire-safety inspection and certification from Rwanda National Police Fire Brigade.

  • Application: Police HQ Fire Brigade unit, or district police office
  • Inspection: Site visit covering fire extinguishers (one per 100m², minimum 6kg), emergency exits, gas-line safety, electrical panels, smoke alarms
  • Cost: RWF 20,000-80,000 typical
  • Time: 1-2 weeks from application
  • Renewable: Annually for restaurants in commercial buildings; bi-annually for standalone premises

Other practical setup costs

  • Premises lease deposit — typically 3-6 months' rent. For a mid-tier Kigali commercial property, that's RWF 1,500,000-12,000,000.
  • Premises fit-out — kitchen equipment, dining furniture, signage. RWF 5,000,000-30,000,000+ depending on scale.
  • Initial inventory — RWF 1,500,000-5,000,000 typical first stock-up.
  • Staff hiring and training — first 3 months' payroll buffer. Plan for RWF 3,000,000-10,000,000.
  • Marketing and launch — soft-opening events, photography, Instagram setup. RWF 500,000-3,000,000.

Realistic timeline from idea to opening

  • Week 1-2: RDB registration. Bank account opening. Initial premises search.
  • Week 3-6: Lease negotiation and signing. District trading licence application. EBM activation.
  • Week 5-10: FDA inspection preparation. Kitchen layout drawings. Health certificates for staff. FDA application and inspection.
  • Week 8-12: Alcohol licence application (if applicable). Fire-safety inspection.
  • Week 10-14: Premises fit-out. Staff hiring. Soft launch and final inspections.
  • Week 14+: Full opening to public.

Total regulatory cost summary

  • RDB registration: RWF 0
  • Notarisation of MOA/AOA (Ltd): RWF 10,000-50,000
  • District trading licence: RWF 60,000-200,000
  • EBM activation: RWF 0-150,000
  • Rwanda FDA certification: RWF 30,000-150,000
  • Alcohol licence (annual): RWF 100,000-500,000
  • Fire-safety inspection: RWF 20,000-80,000
  • Total first-year regulatory cost: RWF 220,000-1,150,000

Related: How to register a business in Rwanda, Opening a restaurant in Kigali — every form, every kitchen rule, RRA tax registration for new businesses. Browse every restaurant on the directory.

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Restaurant licence in Rwanda — what you need in 2026 · Kisimenti Times