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EOR

How to Use An Employer of Record in
Tanzania

This guide covers how to use an Employer of Record (EOR) to hire employees in Tanzania without setting up a local entity; including how it works, what compliance the EOR handles, and what it costs.

Iconic landmark in Tanzania

Capital City

Dodoma

Currency

Tanzanian Shilling

(

TSh

)

Timezone

EAT

(

GMT +3

)

Payroll

Monthly

Employment Cost

15%

Hiring in Tanzania means navigating the Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366), which mandates employer registration with the Commissioner for Labour within 30 days of hiring your first employee, monthly PAYE remittance to the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), and employer social security contributions of 20% of gross salary to the National Social Security Fund (NSSF). An Employer of Record becomes your legal employer in Tanzania, handling payroll, statutory registrations, and all compliance obligations while you direct the employee's work and retain full operational control. The EOR removes the risk of late NSSF or PAYE filings, which can trigger penalties of up to 25% of the unpaid amount plus interest, and eliminates the need for you to establish a registered business entity in the country.

What Is an Employer of Record in Tanzania?

An Employer of Record in Tanzania is a third-party organisation that becomes the legal employer of your staff under Tanzanian law, handling all statutory obligations, payroll processing, and compliance filings with the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) and National Social Security Fund (NSSF) while you retain full operational control over day-to-day work, performance management, and business objectives. The EOR issues employment contracts in its name, manages termination procedures, and owns the employment relationship on paper.

Under the Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366) and the Labour Institutions Act (Cap. 300), every employment contract in Tanzania must include minimum terms covering job description, remuneration, working hours, leave entitlements, and termination notice periods. Employers must register with the Commissioner for Labour, withhold Pay As You Earn (PAYE) income tax at progressive rates up to 30%, and remit employer NSSF contributions monthly. Where collective bargaining agreements or wage orders apply to your sector, the EOR ensures your contracts meet or exceed those minimum standards and files all required returns with the Ministry of Labour.

You retain complete control over the employee's role, responsibilities, objectives, and performance evaluations. The EOR owns the employment contract, payroll cycle, statutory filings with TRA and NSSF, compliance with termination procedures under the Employment and Labour Relations Act, and defence of any labour disputes before the Commission for Mediation and Arbitration (CMA). You never cede management authority over how the work gets done.

How Does an Employer of Record Work in Tanzania?

When you hire through an Employer of Record in Tanzania, the EOR becomes the legal employer while you direct the employee's work. The process involves contract preparation, government registration, payroll setup, and ongoing compliance with the Employment and Labour Relations Act and regulations issued by the Ministry of Labour. Here is how it works step by step.

Step 1: Define Role and Employment Terms

You provide the job title, salary, reporting structure, and any benefits above the statutory minimum. The EOR reviews these terms against Tanzania's minimum wage regulations (currently TZS 400,000 per month for private sector employees under Wage Order GN No. 313 of 2023, updated annually) and any applicable collective bargaining agreement or sectoral wage order that may set higher minimums for your industry. If your role falls under a sector covered by a collective agreement registered with the Registrar of Trade Unions, the EOR confirms the contract meets those negotiated minimums. You agree final terms before the contract is drafted.

Step 2: EOR Compliance Check

The EOR verifies the salary meets or exceeds the statutory minimum wage of TZS 400,000 per month for general private sector workers, or the higher sectoral minimum if one applies. Working time is capped at 45 hours per week under Section 19 of the Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366), with overtime paid at 150% of the ordinary hourly rate. The EOR confirms whether the role is correctly classified as employee or contractor status, because misclassification can trigger backdated PAYE and NSSF liability plus penalties. The compliance check ensures all terms align with the Act and regulations before the contract is issued.

Step 3: Employment Contract

The EOR issues a written employment contract in English, the standard business language, though Swahili may be used if both parties agree. The Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366) requires contracts to state the employer's name and address, employee's full details, job title and duties, remuneration and pay period, working hours and place of work, leave entitlements, notice periods for termination, and commencement date. Fixed-term contracts are permitted for temporary or project-based work but cannot exceed two years without renewal, and repeated renewals may convert the contract to indefinite status by operation of law. The probation period may not exceed six months for most roles, or twelve months for senior management positions. The contract is signed electronically or on paper and a copy provided to the employee within seven days of starting work.

Step 4: Government Registrations

The EOR registers as an employer with the Commissioner for Labour within 30 days of hiring the first employee in Tanzania, as required by the Employment and Labour Relations Act. The EOR also registers with the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) for PAYE withholding and files the monthly PAYE and SDL (Skills and Development Levy) returns. Employees are enrolled in the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) using Form NSSF 10, which must be submitted within seven days of commencement. Failure to register or remit contributions on time triggers penalties of 5% of the unpaid amount for the first month, escalating by 2% for each additional month, plus potential criminal liability for directors or officers under the NSSF Act (Cap. 50). The EOR manages these registrations and filings to keep your workforce compliant from day one.

Step 5: Payroll in Local Currency

Payroll runs monthly in Tanzanian Shillings (TZS), with payment typically made on the last working day of the month or the first working day of the following month. The EOR withholds PAYE income tax at progressive rates from 0% on the first TZS 270,000 per month to 30% on monthly income above TZS 720,000, and remits this to the Tanzania Revenue Authority by the seventh day of the following month. The EOR also withholds the employee's 10% NSSF contribution from gross salary and adds the employer's 20% contribution, then remits the combined 30% to NSSF by the 15th of the following month. Payslips are issued electronically, detailing gross salary, statutory deductions, and net pay.

Step 6: Ongoing Compliance

The EOR files monthly PAYE returns and SDL returns (1% of gross payroll for the Skills and Development Levy) with the Tanzania Revenue Authority by the seventh of each month. NSSF contributions and monthly returns are submitted by the 15th of each month using the NSSF online portal. The EOR maintains employee leave records to comply with annual leave entitlements of 28 days per year under the Employment and Labour Relations Act. Annual tax reconciliation and PAYE Certificate of Tax Deducted (Form P9) are prepared and submitted to TRA by 31 March each year. The EOR monitors updates to wage orders, labour regulations issued by the Ministry of Labour, and collective bargaining agreements that may affect your employees, adjusting payroll and contracts as required.

Step 7: Termination

Termination in Tanzania is governed by Sections 37 to 43 of the Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366), which requires just cause for dismissal: reasons of capacity, conduct, operational requirements, or expiry of a fixed-term contract. Notice periods are set by the contract but typically one month for monthly-paid employees, with longer periods common in collective agreements or senior roles. Severance pay is due when termination is for operational reasons (redundancy) at one month's gross salary for every completed year of service after three years of continuous employment. Termination for gross misconduct or resignation does not trigger severance. The EOR must follow procedural fairness, including written notice of allegations, an opportunity for the employee to respond, and a fair hearing, or risk the employee challenging dismissal at the Commission for Mediation and Arbitration. The EOR handles notice, final pay, severance calculation, and issues a certificate of service and PAYE P9 form.

Employment Laws and Compliance an Employer of Record Handles in Tanzania

When you hire through an Employer of Record in Tanzania, the EOR assumes full responsibility for compliance with the Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366), tax and social security filings, and regulations issued by the Ministry of Labour and the Tanzania Revenue Authority. This means you do not need to build in-country HR or legal expertise to stay compliant.

  • Employment Contracts: Every contract must be in writing, issued within seven days of commencement, and include job title, remuneration, working hours, leave, notice periods, and employer details as required by Section 15 of the Employment and Labour Relations Act. Fixed-term contracts may not exceed two years without renewal, and failure to provide a written contract can result in disputes at the Commission for Mediation and Arbitration treating the relationship as indefinite. The EOR drafts, issues, and maintains all employment contracts.
  • Payroll Tax and PAYE: Employers must withhold PAYE income tax at progressive rates from 0% to 30% on monthly income and remit it to the Tanzania Revenue Authority by the seventh day of the following month. Late remittance triggers penalties of 5% of the unpaid tax per month, interest at commercial rates, and potential criminal prosecution under the Income Tax Act (Cap. 332). The EOR calculates, withholds, and remits PAYE monthly and files annual reconciliations by 31 March.
  • Social Security and NSSF: Employers contribute 20% of gross salary to the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) and withhold an additional 10% from the employee's salary, remitting the combined 30% by the 15th of each month. Failure to remit triggers penalties of 5% of the unpaid amount for the first month, escalating by 2% monthly, plus interest. The EOR registers employees on Form NSSF 10 within seven days of commencement and manages monthly contributions and reporting.
  • Statutory Leave: Employees are entitled to 28 days of paid annual leave per year after 12 months of continuous service, accrued proportionally, plus 14 public holidays. Sick leave is 126 days on full pay in any 36-month period, and maternity leave is 84 days at full pay under the Employment and Labour Relations Act. The EOR tracks accrual, approves leave requests in coordination with you, and ensures payroll reflects leave taken.
  • Termination and Severance: Termination requires just cause under Sections 37 to 43 of the Employment and Labour Relations Act, with procedural fairness including notice of allegations and an opportunity to respond. Severance pay of one month's gross salary per completed year of service is due after three years when termination is for operational reasons (redundancy). The EOR handles notice, final pay, severance calculation, and issues Form P9 and a certificate of service to the employee.
  • Working Time: Ordinary working hours are capped at 45 hours per week and 9 hours per day for a five-day week, or 8 hours per day for a six-day week, under Section 19 of the Employment and Labour Relations Act. Overtime is capped at 50 hours per month and paid at 150% of the ordinary hourly rate. The EOR ensures contracts and payroll comply with these limits and maintains records of hours worked.
  • Health and Safety: Employers must register with the Occupational Safety and Health Authority (OSHA) and comply with the Occupational Health and Safety Act (Cap. 297), including risk assessments, provision of personal protective equipment, and appointment of a safety officer for workplaces with 20 or more employees. Non-compliance can result in fines, closure orders, or prosecution. The EOR registers with OSHA, files annual returns, and maintains documentation.
  • Data Protection and Employee Privacy: Employers must comply with the Personal Data Protection Act, 2022, which requires lawful basis for processing employee data, consent for sensitive personal data, secure storage, and notification to the Personal Data Protection Commission. Breaches can result in fines up to TZS 5,000,000,000 or 5% of annual turnover. The EOR implements data protection policies, secures employee records, and registers as a data controller.
  • Collective Agreements: Where a collective bargaining agreement registered with the Registrar of Trade Unions covers your sector or occupation, its terms supersede statutory minimums and must be applied to all employees within scope. Collective agreements commonly set higher minimum wages, longer notice periods, and additional benefits. The EOR monitors applicable collective agreements, ensures contracts comply, and adjusts payroll when agreements are renewed.
  • Skills and Development Levy: Employers must pay a Skills and Development Levy (SDL) of 1% of gross monthly payroll to the Tanzania Revenue Authority, in addition to PAYE, by the seventh of the following month. This funds the Vocational Education and Training Authority (VETA). Non-payment triggers the same penalties as late PAYE remittance. The EOR calculates, remits, and files SDL returns monthly.

How Much Does It Cost to Use an Employer of Record in Tanzania?

The total cost of hiring in Tanzania through an Employer of Record includes two components: statutory employer costs mandated by Tanzanian law and the EOR service fee. Statutory costs are fixed by the National Social Security Fund Act, the Income Tax Act, and the Skills and Development Levy regulations, and every employer in Tanzania pays them. Playroll's Employer of Record service fee starts from $399 per employee per month, billed separately from the employee's salary and statutory costs. This fee covers payroll processing, contract preparation, government filings, compliance monitoring, and ongoing support.

Let's look at an example that includes a base salary and the EOR service fee.

ItemRateMonthly Amount (TZS)
Base Salary 3,000,000
NSSF Employer Contribution20%600,000
SDL (Skills and Development Levy)1%30,000
Total Statutory On-Costs 630,000
Total Employer Cost (Salary + Statutory) 3,630,000
EOR Service Fee From $399/month

The EOR service fee covers preparation and maintenance of compliant employment contracts under the Employment and Labour Relations Act, monthly payroll in Tanzanian Shillings, PAYE and NSSF registration and remittance, SDL filing, leave tracking, annual tax reconciliation, updates to reflect changes in wage orders or collective agreements, and management of termination and severance. You pay one predictable monthly fee and avoid the cost of building an in-country HR, payroll, and legal function.

Employer of Record vs Setting Up an Entity in Tanzania

The decision between using an Employer of Record and establishing your own legal entity in Tanzania depends on your hiring scale, timeline, and commitment. Most foreign companies incorporate a private limited company (limited by shares) under the Companies Act, 2002, which requires registration with the Business Registrations and Licensing Agency (BRELA), a minimum of two directors (at least one resident in Tanzania or an East African Community member state), a registered office address in Tanzania, and share capital (no statutory minimum but banks typically require at least TZS 1,000,000). The incorporation process takes six to ten weeks, costs $3,000 to $8,000 including legal fees, BRELA registration, TIN and VAT registration, and corporate bank account opening, and requires annual audited accounts filed with BRELA and annual returns to the Tanzania Revenue Authority.

Employer of RecordLocal Entity (Private Limited Company)
Time to hire first employee10 to 15 business days6 to 10 weeks (entity setup) + 2 to 3 weeks (first hire)
Setup costNone (service fee from $399/month per employee)$3,000 to $8,000 (BRELA registration, legal, bank account)
Ongoing admin burdenEOR handles payroll, filings, compliance, amendmentsIn-house or outsourced HR, payroll, annual audit, BRELA and TRA filings
Compliance riskEOR owns compliance and liability for employment lawCompany owns all compliance, penalties, and dispute defence
Minimum commitmentMonth-to-month per employeeMulti-year (entity exists until dissolved, with annual costs)
Best for1 to 15 employees, market testing, project-based hiringEstablished market presence, 15+ employees, long-term operations
Tanzania-specific considerationEOR handles NSSF, PAYE, SDL, collective agreement monitoring, and CMA disputesYou must appoint a resident director, file annual returns, maintain a local office, and manage OSHA registration

For companies hiring fewer than 10 employees in Tanzania, an Employer of Record is almost always the faster and more cost-effective route.

Playroll also supports your long-term growth through its Global Entity Setup product, which handles entity incorporation and local payroll in 120+ countries, so you can transition from EOR to your own compliant entity in Tanzania when the time is right, without switching providers or rebuilding your HR processes.

How Long Does It Take to Hire Someone in Tanzania Through an Employer of Record?

You can hire an employee in Tanzania through an Employer of Record in 10 to 15 business days from contract signature to the employee's first working day.

  • Stage 1: Contract preparation and signing (2 to 3 business days): The EOR drafts a compliant employment contract under the Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366), including all mandatory clauses on remuneration, working hours, leave, and termination. Timing depends on how quickly you provide final job details and approve the draft, and whether any collective agreement terms require review.
  • Stage 2: Government registrations (3 to 5 business days): The EOR registers the employee with the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) using Form NSSF 10, which must be submitted within seven days of commencement, and files the employee's details with the Tanzania Revenue Authority for PAYE withholding. Late registration can result in penalties of 5% of unpaid contributions escalating monthly, so the EOR completes these filings before the employee starts work.
  • Stage 3: Payroll configuration and first cycle (2 to 3 business days): The EOR sets up the employee in the payroll system, configures gross salary, NSSF and PAYE withholding, SDL calculation, and leave accruals. Payroll runs monthly, so if the employee starts mid-month, the first payslip reflects a pro-rated amount. The first payslip arrives at the end of the month of commencement or the first working day of the next month.
  • Stage 4: Tanzania-specific requirements (concurrent with Stage 2): If the role falls under a sector covered by a collective bargaining agreement registered with the Registrar of Trade Unions, the EOR verifies contract terms against the agreement's minimum standards. This review typically runs in parallel with government registrations and does not extend the overall timeline unless the agreement imposes unique notice or benefit clauses requiring additional drafting.

The timeline can extend if you require amendments to the contract after initial drafting, if the employee's identification documents are incomplete or require verification, or if a collective agreement with complex benefit provisions applies to the role. Public holidays in Tanzania, particularly Eid and Christmas periods, can also delay government office processing by one to two business days.

Hiring through an Employer of Record takes 10 to 15 business days, compared to six to ten weeks to incorporate a private limited company in Tanzania, open a corporate bank account, register with TRA and NSSF, and onboard your first employee.

How Playroll's Employer of Record Process Works in Tanzania

Playroll makes hiring in Tanzania straightforward by owning the compliance and administrative workload while you stay focused on building your team.

1. You define the role and terms

You provide the job title, salary, start date, and any benefits or allowances. Playroll reviews your terms against Tanzania's minimum wage (currently TZS 400,000 per month for private sector workers), the Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366), and any applicable collective bargaining agreement, then confirms the role is structured compliantly before drafting the contract.

2. Playroll prepares a compliant contract

Playroll drafts an employment contract in English (or Swahili if preferred) that includes all mandatory clauses required by the Employment and Labour Relations Act: job description, remuneration, working hours capped at 45 hours per week, 28 days of annual leave, notice periods, and termination conditions. The contract is issued in Playroll's name as the legal employer, and you approve it before the employee signs.

3. Your employee is onboarded and payroll goes live

Onboarding takes 10 to 15 business days from contract signature to first day of work. Playroll registers the employee with the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) on Form NSSF 10 and the Tanzania Revenue Authority for PAYE withholding, sets up payroll to run monthly in Tanzanian Shillings, and handles all statutory filings including the 1% Skills and Development Levy. The employee receives their first payslip at the end of their first month of work.

4. Playroll manages ongoing compliance and growth

Playroll files monthly PAYE and SDL returns with the Tanzania Revenue Authority by the seventh of each month, remits NSSF contributions by the 15th, tracks leave accruals, monitors updates to wage orders and collective agreements, and handles termination and severance calculations under the Employment and Labour Relations Act. If your hiring in Tanzania scales to where establishing your own entity makes commercial sense, Playroll can manage that transition through its global entity setup service, so you never have to switch providers or rebuild payroll infrastructure.

Disclaimer

THIS CONTENT IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND DOES NOT CONSTITUTE LEGAL OR TAX ADVICE. You should always consult with and rely on your own legal and/or tax advisor(s). Playroll does not provide legal or tax advice. The information is general and not tailored to a specific company or workforce and does not reflect Playroll’s product delivery in any given jurisdiction. Playroll makes no representations or warranties concerning the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of this information and shall have no liability arising out of or in connection with it, including any loss caused by use of, or reliance on, the information.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Milani Notshe

Milani is a seasoned research and content specialist at Playroll, a leading Employer Of Record (EOR) provider. Backed by a strong background in Politics, Philosophy and Economics, she specializes in identifying emerging compliance and global HR trends to keep employers up to date on the global employment landscape.

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Employer of Record FAQS

01

Can I hire employees in Tanzania without a local entity?

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Yes, you can hire employees in Tanzania without incorporating a local entity by using an Employer of Record. The EOR becomes the legal employer under Tanzanian law, issues employment contracts, and registers as an employer with the Commissioner for Labour, the Tanzania Revenue Authority for PAYE withholding, and the National Social Security Fund. This means you do not need to register a private limited company with the Business Registrations and Licensing Agency (BRELA), appoint resident directors, or maintain a local office. You retain full control over the employee's work and performance while the EOR owns all compliance obligations under the Employment and Labour Relations Act.

02

What employment contract is required in Tanzania?

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Every employee in Tanzania must receive a written employment contract within seven days of starting work, as required by Section 15 of the Employment and Labour Relations Act (Cap. 366). The contract must be in English or Swahili and include the employer's name and address, the employee's full details, job title and duties, remuneration and pay period, ordinary working hours (capped at 45 hours per week), place of work, leave entitlements including 28 days of annual leave and 84 days of maternity leave, notice periods for termination, and the commencement date. Fixed-term contracts are permitted for temporary or project-based work but may not exceed two years without renewal, and repeated renewals may convert the contract to indefinite status. When you hire through an Employer of Record, the EOR drafts, issues, and maintains this contract in full compliance with the Act.

03

How long does it take to onboard an employee via an Employer of Record in Tanzania?

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Onboarding an employee through an Employer of Record in Tanzania takes 10 to 15 business days from contract signature to the employee's first working day. This includes contract drafting and approval, registration with the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) and Tanzania Revenue Authority for PAYE, and payroll configuration. The timeline can extend by two to three business days if the employee's identification documents require verification, if the role falls under a collective bargaining agreement with additional contract clauses, or if your approval of the draft contract is delayed. Public holidays in Tanzania may also add one to two business days to government registration processing.

04

Is an Employer of Record responsible for compliance if laws change in Tanzania?

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Yes, the Employer of Record is responsible for monitoring and implementing changes to Tanzania's employment laws, tax regulations, and wage orders. One area that changes frequently is the statutory minimum wage, which is revised annually by the Wages Board through government notices published in the Gazette, most recently updated to TZS 400,000 per month in 2023. The EOR tracks updates to the Employment and Labour Relations Act, regulations issued by the Ministry of Labour, changes to PAYE rates or NSSF contribution levels set by the Tanzania Revenue Authority and NSSF Board, and amendments to collective bargaining agreements. When a change takes effect, the EOR updates employment contracts, adjusts payroll calculations, and files any new statutory returns or notifications to keep your workforce compliant without requiring action from you.

05

Why do companies choose playroll to hire in Tanzania?

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Companies choose Playroll to hire in Tanzania because Playroll owns the complexity of complying with the Employment and Labour Relations Act, monthly PAYE and NSSF filings, Skills and Development Levy remittance, and monitoring of wage orders and collective bargaining agreements, so you can hire in 10 to 15 business days without incorporating a local entity or appointing a resident director. Playroll registers employees with the National Social Security Fund and Tanzania Revenue Authority, handles termination and severance under the procedural fairness requirements that apply at the Commission for Mediation and Arbitration, and adjusts payroll when statutory rates or minimum wages change. This means you avoid penalties for late NSSF or PAYE remittance, which start at 5% of unpaid amounts and escalate monthly, and you never need to build an in-country HR or legal function to stay compliant.

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