Skip to main content

VAT hike on the cards for South Africa

| Economic factors

By: Bloomberg

South Africa’s National Treasury may have to hike value-added tax (VAT) on some goods and services to bring in new revenues, accounting firm PwC said.

Finance minister Enoch Godongwana in November signalled that he would announce new tax measures to raise an additional R15 billion rand in his 21 February budget.

The country is facing spiralling debt and growing spending needs that may be exacerbated by elections in which the ruling African National Congress risks losing its national majority for the first time since it took power in 1994.

“We really don’t have scope from a corporate income tax point of view,” Kyle Mandy, PwC South Africa tax policy leader told reporters Tuesday. “Nor do we really have scope from a personal income tax perspective.”

To raise the R15 billion, Treasury would have to increase VAT by 0.5% to 15.5%, Mandy said, adding that personal income tax has largely been exhausted and corporate taxes in recent years have been a “volatile” and “unreliable” revenue source.

That’s in part due to mining companies, which have contributed to previous windfalls, facing a knock to their profits from lower commodity prices, power cuts and logistics snarl-ups.

“That leaves VAT,” he said, but the question is “are they brave enough to go and raise the VAT rate” in an election year.

The last time South Africa ratcheted up the levy was in 2018, when it hiked it to 15% from 14%, with the expectation of boosting revenues following hefty spending commitments.

A VAT increase could be made more palatable if it is tied to a popular R350 monthly social relief of distress grant for the unemployed, said Mandy.

value added President Cyril Ramaphosa last week pledged to extend and improve the stipend.

Treasury could employ a model similar to the VAT increases of 2018, which then Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba said would be used in part to fund free higher education announced the prior year, Mandy said.

“They actually have an opportunity to actually link a VAT increase or justify a VAT increase by linking that to the SRD grant.”

Pin It

Related Articles

South Africa’s consumer landscape is shifting, but according to Dr Greg Cline, Head of Portfolio Management at Investec, this change isn’t being driven by interest rates anymore.
By: Nicola Mawson – IOL Business South Africa’s inflation outlook is showing signs of easing, creating space for potential interest rate cuts in 2026.
South African motorists may soon see petrol prices dip below R20 a litre for the first time in four years, provided global oil prices do not surge sharply and the rand avoids a significant decline against the US dollar in the coming weeks.
Source: BizCommunity Global food commodity prices edged lower in December 2025, easing from the previous month as declines in dairy, meat and vegetable oils outweighed rising cereal and sugar prices, according to the Food and Agriculture Organizati…
Source: BizCommunity With Stats SA announcing that inflation hit a 10-month high in July, and that annual inflation for food and non-alcoholic beverages continues to rise, the harsh reality of South Africa’s spiralling food prices is hitting home.