Complete Guide to Buying Gold in Tanzania (CIF & FOB Procedures)

Last Updated: May 2026
Reading Time: 15 minutes
Category: Gold Buying Guides

Tanzania is one of Africa’s largest gold producers, with a highly structured legal framework for mineral trading. This guide explains exactly how to buy gold from Tanzania, including dealer licensing, royalty payments, the 20% domestic set-aside rule, and step-by-step CIF and FOB procedures.


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Legal Framework Governing Gold Trade in Tanzania

The gold trade in Tanzania is governed by the Mining Act, Cap. 123 (No. 14 of 2010, as amended) and several supporting regulations [citation:6][citation:8][citation:10].

Key Legal Instruments

InstrumentKey Relevance
Mining Act, Cap. 123Principal legislation. Governs all mineral rights, licences, trading, royalties, export controls
Mining (Mineral Trading) Regulations, 2010Procedures for dealer, broker, and export permit applications
Mining (Minerals and Mineral Concentrates Trading) Regulations, 2018Terms of mineral trading, local processing requirements
Mining (Amendment) Regulations, 2024Introduced mandatory 20% domestic gold set-aside
Finance Act 2025Removed exemptions from set-aside; introduced 0.1% HIV Response Levy

Critical jurisdiction note: Under the Natural Wealth & Resources (Permanent Sovereignty) Act, 2017, any agreement relating to minerals in Tanzania must be governed by Tanzanian law and adjudicated in Tanzanian forums [citation:6]. Foreign law clauses are void.


Who Can Legally Trade and Export Gold in Tanzania?

Licence Types and Their Authorized Activities [citation:6][citation:8][citation:10]

LicenceWho Can HoldCan Export?Key Restrictions
Primary Mining Licence (PML)Tanzanian citizens onlyNoSell only to licensed dealers or Mineral Markets
Broker LicenceTanzanian citizens or local companiesNoCan buy from miners, sell to dealers. No export.
Dealer Licence (DL)Tanzanian or mixed ownership (≥25% Tanzanian)Yes (with permit)Core commercial trading authorization
Processing Licence (PCL)Any compliant entityContext-dependentFor beneficiation (crushing, gravity separation)
Smelting Licence (SL)Any compliant entityContext-dependentFor producing dore bars
Refinery Licence (RFL)Any compliant entityYesHighest-tier; can buy the 20% set-aside

Summary rule for foreign buyers [citation:6]:

  • A broker can buy from miners and sell to dealers – but cannot export.
  • A dealer can buy from miners or brokers and can export – but only after satisfying all regulatory conditions.
  • A PML is reserved exclusively for Tanzanian citizens.

For foreign investors: The correct strategy is to operate via a compliant Dealer Licence structure satisfying the 25% Tanzanian participation requirement [citation:10].


The 20% Domestic Set-Aside Rule (Critical for Buyers)

Under the 2024 regulations as amended by the Finance Act 2025, all licensed dealers must offer 20% of their gold to the domestic market (Bank of Tanzania or local refiners) before export [citation:6].

What this means for buyers:

  • A dealer can only export up to 80% of their gold inventory
  • The remaining 20% must be sold domestically
  • This has created a two-tier market for gold in Tanzania

Penalties for non-compliance: Export permits will not be issued without proof of set-aside compliance [citation:6].


Royalties, Taxes, and Fiscal Obligations

Royalties are payments made to the Government of Tanzania as the owner of all minerals, calculated on gross value [citation:6][citation:8].

LevyStandard RateBoT Programme RateNotes
Mineral Royalty6%4%On gross value at export. Reduced to 4% for BoT/refinery sales
Export Tax4%N/A (domestic sale)Applies to unrefined gold exported
Inspection / Clearing Fee1%0% (waived)On value of all minerals exported
Withholding Tax (ASM)5%2%Applies to small-scale miner transactions
HIV Response Levy0.1%0.1%Introduced Finance Act 2025
Corporate Income Tax30%30%On net profits

Payment timing: Royalties and taxes must be paid before an export permit will be issued [citation:6][citation:8].


Step-by-Step Export Process for Tanzania Gold

Having satisfied the 20% domestic set-aside obligation, a licensed dealer may export the remaining 80% [citation:6][citation:10].

Step 1: Company and Licence Verification

The exporting entity must hold a valid Dealer Licence. Verify on the Mining Commission’s online portal at madini.go.tz before any transaction [citation:6].

Required documents:

  • Dealer Licence (valid)
  • BRELA registration
  • TRA Taxpayer Identification Number
  • VAT registration
  • Current on all licence renewal obligations

Step 2: Assay and Certification by TMAA

All gold intended for export must be assayed by the Tanzania Minerals Audit Agency (TMAA) [citation:6].

TMAA conducts fire assay or XRF analysis to verify:

  • Purity (Tanzanian gold regularly achieves 99.9%/24K after refining)
  • Weight

Timeline: TMAA assay typically takes 1-3 days [citation:6].

Step 3: Certificate of Origin

Obtain a Certificate of Origin confirming the gold was legally extracted within Tanzania [citation:6]. Required for:

  • Export permit application (TMC)
  • Customs authorities in destination markets (conflict-free certification)

Step 4: Payment of Royalties and Taxes

All applicable royalties, export taxes, and fees must be paid and receipted before an export permit will be issued [citation:6][citation:8].

Step 5: Export Permit Application to TMC

Submit an export permit application to the Tanzania Mining Commission (TMC) in the prescribed form [citation:6][citation:8].

Required attachments:

  • Valid Dealer Licence
  • TMAA assay report
  • Certificate of Origin
  • Tax and royalty payment receipts
  • Signed purchase or sale agreement
  • Evidence of compliance with the 20% domestic set-aside

Processing time: Digital processing has reduced permit approval to 48-72 hours [citation:6].

Step 6: Customs Clearance and Secure Logistics

Gold must be transported using approved, licensed security carriers [citation:6]:

  • Brinks
  • G4S
  • Other established operators

Shipment points:

  • Julius Nyerere International Airport (Dar es Salaam)
  • Port of Dar es Salaam

CIF vs. FOB Procedures for Tanzania

CIF (Cost, Insurance, Freight) Procedure

Under CIF, the seller arranges shipping and insurance to the buyer’s destination.

Step-by-step CIF process for Tanzania gold purchases [citation:2]:

StepAction
1Buyer provides 7-10% payment guarantee (or as negotiated) to seller/financing bank
2Seller and buyer coordinate with the Mining Commission for export documentation approval
3Upon confirmation, buyer’s bank pays all export taxes, insurance, and freight costs
4Goods are shipped to buyer’s chosen airport or refinery
5Final assay conducted at destination
6Balance payment made after final assay

CIF is recommended for: First-time buyers, smaller volumes, buyers unable to travel to Tanzania.

FOB (Free on Board) Procedure

Under FOB, the buyer arranges shipping from Tanzania.

Step-by-step FOB process for Tanzania gold purchases [citation:2][citation:5]:

StepAction
1Buyer or representative flies to Tanzania
2Both parties inspect and test gold together (smelting/assay on site)
3Upon verification, buyer pays 10-20% deposit (negotiated)
4Both parties proceed to government refinery (TMAA) for official assay
5After assay report, balance paid at buyer’s refinery
6Buyer arranges export logistics

FOB is recommended for: Serious buyers, larger volumes (100kg+ monthly), long-term relationships.

Collateral Procedure (For Large Transactions)

For transactions requiring buyer protection (typical for 500kg+ volumes):

  1. Consignment is kept in a licensed security company in Tanzania [citation:5]
  2. Buyer travels to Tanzania to inspect and confirm product
  3. Both parties sign Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA) with buyer’s lawyer
  4. Buyer pays 10% to cover taxes, insurance, and freight
  5. Seller provides collateral held in joint custody
  6. Seller has one week to complete export paperwork
  7. Goods shipped to buyer’s destination country
  8. Final payment after final assay in buyer’s country
  9. Collateral returned to seller

AML/KYC and Anti-Scam Controls (Non-Negotiable)

If you want institutional-grade transactions, your compliance must match [citation:10]:

Minimum controls:

  • Counterparty KYC (IDs, licence verification, beneficial ownership)
  • Source-of-gold validation (licence chain, location, production reasonableness)
  • Assay integrity controls (independent assay, tamper seals, witnessed sampling)
  • Payment traceability (bank trail; avoid cash)
  • Conflict-of-interest screening (agents, brokers, “introducers”)

Common scam patterns to block [citation:10]:

  • “Gold in escrow in a hotel/warehouse” with fake documents
  • Seller refusing independent assay or demanding “release fees”
  • Fake export permits / fake dealer licences
  • Buyer asked to pay “Mining Commission clearance” to personal accounts
  • Gold swapped after sampling (no tamper chain)

Required Documentation Checklist for Tanzania Gold Exports

Before funds are released, ensure the seller provides [citation:6][citation:8][citation:10]:

DocumentIssued By
Valid Dealer LicenceMining Commission
TMAA Assay CertificateTanzania Minerals Audit Agency
Certificate of OriginMining Commission / Chamber of Commerce
Export PermitTanzania Mining Commission
Royalty Payment ReceiptTanzania Revenue Authority
Tax Clearance CertificateTRA
Sale and Purchase AgreementBoth parties (governed by Tanzanian law)

Practical Compliance Guidance for Foreign Buyers

Foreign investors face elevated risks when exporting minerals from Tanzania [citation:8][citation:10].

Before any transaction:

  • Verify the mineral right or dealer licence with the Mining Commission
  • Confirm the seller’s legal authority to export
  • Ensure royalty and tax payments are properly assessed and receipted
  • Confirm inspection, sealing, and export documentation
  • Engage local legal counsel before funds are released

Penalties for non-compliance [citation:8]:

  • Fine of up to TZS 10 million
  • Imprisonment for up to three years
  • Or both

Related Resources


External Resources for Further Research


Disclaimer

This guide is for informational purposes only. Gold trading involves significant risks. Always conduct your own due diligence and consult legal and financial professionals before any transaction. BuyGold.Blog is not a licensed broker or dealer.

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