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Rwanda VAT in 2026 — thresholds, registration, filing

The 18% Value Added Tax, the RWF 20 million threshold, the EBM requirement, the monthly filing cycle, input vs output VAT, and the practical 2026 guide for any Rwandan business that's just crossed or is about to cross the VAT line.

Tuyizere · Reporter on business, coffee and the Rwandan commercial landscape.Published 8 min read
BPR Bank Rwanda — the everyday banking-and-tax context in which VAT settlements happen
Photo via BPR Bank

Value Added Tax (VAT) is Rwanda's most-collected single tax — the consumption tax applied to most goods and services at 18%. For new business owners the working questions are: do you need to register, what does it cost in compliance, and how does the input-output calculation work in practice. This is the working 2026 guide.

The headline numbers

  • Standard rate: 18%
  • Zero-rated: Exports, certain agricultural products, healthcare and education services in some categories
  • Exempt: Financial services, life insurance, public passenger transport, certain medical services
  • Mandatory registration threshold: RWF 20 million annual turnover (any rolling 12-month period)
  • Voluntary registration: Available below threshold for businesses that prefer to charge VAT (typically those selling primarily to other VAT-registered businesses)
  • Filing frequency: Monthly, by the 15th of the following month
  • Payment frequency: Monthly, by the 15th

When you need to register

VAT registration becomes mandatory once your annual turnover crosses RWF 20 million in any consecutive 12-month period. You must register within 7 working days of crossing the threshold. Late registration triggers backdated VAT liability plus penalties.

Many smaller businesses register voluntarily even below the threshold — particularly:

  • B2B-focused service businesses where customers can reclaim the VAT you charge
  • Importers who pay VAT on imports and want to reclaim it
  • Businesses selling to international hotels, NGOs, embassies that often require VAT-compliant invoicing
  • Anyone planning to grow above RWF 20M in the near term — register early to establish the compliance habits

How VAT actually works — input vs output

VAT is a flow-through tax. You charge VAT on what you sell (output VAT) and you pay VAT on what you buy (input VAT). The net amount — output minus input — is what you pay RRA each month. If your input VAT exceeds your output VAT, you can carry the credit forward or apply for a refund.

Worked example

In June 2026, your business sells RWF 10 million in services and buys RWF 4 million in inputs (rent, software, supplies). All amounts are VAT-exclusive.

  • Sales (output): RWF 10,000,000 × 18% = RWF 1,800,000 VAT charged
  • Purchases (input): RWF 4,000,000 × 18% = RWF 720,000 VAT paid
  • Net VAT payable: RWF 1,800,000 − RWF 720,000 = RWF 1,080,000
  • Due to RRA by 15 July 2026: RWF 1,080,000

The EBM — non-negotiable for VAT-registered businesses

VAT-registered businesses must issue every invoice through an EBM (Electronic Billing Machine). The EBM transmits invoice data to RRA in real-time. This is what makes VAT enforcement work — RRA already knows your output VAT before you file. Word-processor invoices, handwritten receipts, or any non-EBM invoice doesn't count and triggers penalties.

Filing the monthly VAT return

  1. Log in to etax.rra.gov.rw by the 15th of the month following the reporting period
  2. Open the VAT return form
  3. Output VAT auto-populates from your EBM transmissions during the month
  4. Enter input VAT — purchases from VAT-registered suppliers (verify with their EBM-compliant invoices)
  5. Adjustments for zero-rated sales, exempt sales, prior-period corrections
  6. Calculate net payable (system does this automatically)
  7. Submit return and make payment via MoMo, bank transfer, or RRA payment counter
  8. Receive confirmation — keep the digital receipt

Penalties for non-compliance

  • Late registration above threshold: 50% of the VAT that should have been charged, plus interest
  • Late filing (even nil returns): RWF 100,000-500,000 per missed return
  • Late payment: 1.5% per month interest on outstanding amount
  • Issuing non-EBM invoices: RWF 200,000-2,000,000 per violation; second offence triggers business-licence review
  • Under-reporting: Assessed amount plus 50%-200% penalty depending on severity

Zero-rated vs exempt — the distinction matters

Zero-rated and exempt both result in no VAT charge to the customer, but the input-VAT consequences differ:

  • Zero-rated (exports, some agricultural products): You charge 0% VAT but you can reclaim input VAT on your purchases. Net effect: VAT-free for the customer, with full input recovery for you.
  • Exempt (financial services, certain medical): You charge 0% VAT and you cannot reclaim input VAT. Net effect: input VAT becomes a real cost in your operation.

VAT refunds — when input exceeds output

If your input VAT consistently exceeds output VAT (common for exporters and businesses still investing heavily), you can apply for a refund. RRA processes legitimate refunds — most exporters refund quarterly. Refund applications must be supported by full documentation; routine audits accompany refund processing.

What VAT-registered businesses get wrong

  1. Treating VAT as part of revenue. It isn't — it's collected on behalf of RRA and remitted monthly. Set up a separate VAT clearing account to track liabilities.
  2. Missing monthly nil returns. Even months with no activity require a return.
  3. Claiming input VAT from non-EBM invoices. Only invoices from VAT-registered suppliers, transmitted via EBM, count.
  4. Mixing personal and business purchases. Personal VAT can't be claimed back as input. Don't claim home-furniture purchases as business expenses.
  5. Late EBM activation. Issuing invoices before EBM is active and operational means VAT-credit problems on those early invoices.

Related: RRA tax registration for new businesses, How to register a business in Rwanda, Rwanda PAYE — calculating and paying employee tax. Browse every business on the directory.

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Rwanda VAT in 2026 — thresholds, registration, filing · Kisimenti Times