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EAC Common External Tariff: Sensitive Items and Rates

East African Community CET in 2026: four-band structure, sensitive list, Kenya VAT, partner-state specifics.

Updated 2026-06-105 min read
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EAC Common External Tariff: Sensitive Items and Rates

The East African Community (EAC) operates a Common External Tariff (CET) across seven member states: Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda. The CET schedule was overhauled effective 1 July 2022, introducing a fourth tariff band at 35 percent for sensitive products. For importers into East Africa, the CET plus the member-state VAT plus excise where applicable is the core duty calculation.

This guide explains the four-band CET, the sensitive items list, partner-state specifics, and worked examples for Kenya and Tanzania imports.

The four-band CET structure

BandRateCoverage
00%Raw materials and capital goods used in production
110%Intermediate goods
225%Final consumer goods
335%Sensitive products (agriculture and select finished goods)

The 35 percent band is the headline change from 2022 onwards. The list of products in band 3 includes:

  • Cement and certain cement-related products
  • Iron and steel rebar and selected long products
  • Sugar (raw and refined)
  • Milk and certain dairy products
  • Maize, wheat, rice (selected processing stages)
  • Vegetable oils (palm oil, sunflower, refined)
  • Furniture and finished wood products
  • Tomato products (paste, ketchup)
  • Confectionery and certain chocolates
  • Leather footwear
  • Certain household textiles

Worked example: importing finished furniture into Kenya

A US exporter ships 50,000 USD of wooden furniture (HS 9403.60) to Mombasa. CET band 3 (35 percent). Kenya VAT: 16 percent. Import Declaration Fee (IDF): 3.5 percent. Railway Development Levy (RDL): 2 percent.

ChargeRateBaseAmount (USD)
CET duty35%50,00017,500.00
IDF3.5%50,0001,750.00
RDL2%50,0001,000.00
Kenya VAT (on CIF + duty + IDF + RDL)16%70,25011,240.00
Total at border31,490.00

Effective rate on FOB: 63 percent. Kenya's furniture sector benefits from this protection.

Worked example: importing capital machinery into Uganda

A US exporter ships 200,000 USD of industrial machinery (HS 8479.89) to Kampala via Mombasa. CET band 0 (0 percent for capital goods). Uganda VAT: 18 percent. Withholding tax on imports: 6 percent (deductible against income tax).

ChargeRateBaseAmount (USD)
CET duty0%200,0000.00
Withholding tax (WHT)6%200,00012,000.00
Uganda VAT18%200,00036,000.00
Total at border48,000.00

The 6 percent WHT is creditable against future Uganda corporate tax. For a B2B import where the buyer is VAT-registered, both VAT and WHT are recoverable through the tax cycle.

Annual stays of application

Each year before 1 July the EAC Council of Ministers publishes the East African Community Gazette listing stays of application. A stay allows one or more member states to charge a different rate on a specific HS line for the coming fiscal year. Stays are typically requested by member states to:

  • Protect nascent local production with a higher rate.
  • Allow a temporary lower rate to facilitate sourcing of inputs not produced regionally.

For 2025-26, examples of active stays:

  • Kenya charges 35 percent (instead of 25 percent) on certain edible oils.
  • Tanzania charges 0 percent (instead of 25 percent) on cooking oil inputs for local refining.
  • Uganda applies a duty remission scheme for textile inputs.

Stays expire at the end of each fiscal year unless renewed. Importers should check the current gazette before relying on the band rate.

Member-state specifics

CountryVATExciseNotable
Kenya16% (8% on petroleum)Various on alcohol, tobacco, plasticsIDF 3.5%, RDL 2%
Uganda18%Various on alcohol, tobacco, soft drinksWHT 6% on imports
Tanzania18%VariousExcise duty applies before VAT
Rwanda18%VariousLess paperwork than other EAC ports
Burundi18%VariousSmaller market; transit complications
South Sudan18% (selectively)VariousDifficult customs environment
DRC16%VariousNew EAC member; transition rules

EAC origin and preferences

Intra-EAC trade qualifies for duty-free preference under the EAC Rules of Origin. To qualify:

  1. Wholly produced in EAC, or
  2. Substantially transformed with non-originating materials no more than 70 percent of the ex-works price, or
  3. Tariff shift at the HS heading level for non-originating materials.

A certificate of origin (Form EAC) is required. The producer applies through the relevant national bureau (KEBS in Kenya, UNBS in Uganda, TBS in Tanzania).

For non-EAC origin (US, EU, China, India), no preference applies and the full CET rate is charged.

EAC and other African blocs

  • COMESA: overlapping with EAC. Goods of COMESA origin can claim COMESA preferences when entering COMESA member states; many EAC countries are also COMESA members.
  • AfCFTA: the African Continental Free Trade Area entered its operational phase in 2021 and is progressively reducing tariffs on intra-African trade. Implementation has been slow but progressing.
  • Tripartite FTA (TFTA): among EAC, COMESA, and SADC; in the process of operationalization.

For importers from outside Africa, these overlapping blocs do not change the basic CET calculation. They become relevant only for intra-African flows.

Customs procedures

Kenya operates the integrated customs management system (iCMS) since 2018. Uganda uses ASYCUDA World. Tanzania uses TANCIS. Rwanda uses ReSW (Rwanda Electronic Single Window).

A single window for customs and tax has been operational in most EAC states since 2016-2018. The Mombasa and Dar es Salaam ports are the two main gateways. The Northern Corridor (Mombasa-Kampala-Kigali) handles Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi cargo. The Central Corridor (Dar-Lusaka-Lubumbashi) handles Tanzania and DRC.

Pre-shipment inspection is mandatory in some categories: scrap metal, used vehicles, certain electronics. Importer must engage a CBCA (Certificate of Conformity)-issuing inspection agency before shipment.

How the calculator handles EAC destinations

When you select an EAC destination in the calculator, the engine:

  1. Identifies the CET band from the HS line.
  2. Checks the current EAC gazette for any active stays of application on the line for the destination member state.
  3. Applies the IDF, RDL, WHT, or other member-state-specific levies.
  4. Computes member-state VAT on the customs value plus duty plus levies.
  5. Applies excise duty where the line is excisable (alcohol, tobacco, plastic bags in some states).

Run an EAC import calculation in the calculator.

Frequently asked questions

When did the EAC CET take its current form?

The EAC CET was overhauled effective 1 July 2022 to introduce a fourth tariff band at 35 percent for sensitive products, replacing the previous three-band structure.

Which countries are in the EAC?

Burundi, DRC (since 2022), Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda. Seven member states total. Somalia is in accession negotiations.

What is the highest EAC tariff band?

35 percent. This covers selected agricultural products and finished consumer goods on the sensitive items list.

Are there sector-specific stays?

Yes. The EAC Council of Ministers issues annual stays of application that allow specific member states to charge higher or lower rates on specific HS lines for one fiscal year. These are gazetted before each 1 July.

Does VAT apply at import?

Yes. Kenya 16 percent, Uganda 18 percent, Tanzania 18 percent, Rwanda 18 percent, Burundi 18 percent. VAT base is customs value plus duty.

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