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Labrish
Nyuuz
Zim users now taxed 15% on Netflix, Spotify, and more
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[QUOTE="Munyaradzi Mafaro, post: 81862, member: 636"] Well, there goes your Netflix subscription getting more expensive. Zimbabwe just slapped a fifteen percent tax on payments to foreign digital platforms, with banks and mobile money operators now required to withhold the cash at the point of payment. This new Digital Services Withholding Tax, enacted via the Finance Act and pushed by Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube, targets revenue from offshore companies like streaming services and online marketplaces that have no physical presence in the country. The tax applies to a whole list of digital services. That includes everything from subscription platforms like Netflix or Spotify to online advertising, cloud computing, e-hailing apps, satellite internet such as Starlink, and digital gaming. The levy is being applied in place of the value-added tax on these imported digital services. Financial intermediaries are legally on the hook to deduct the fifteen percent when processing payments to these foreign providers. They then have thirty days to remit the withheld funds to the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority, or Zimra. These intermediaries also must give users a certificate showing the gross payment and the tax deducted. Failure to comply brings penalties. Entities that do not withhold or remit the tax face liability for the full amount owed plus a fifteen percent surcharge. Zimra does have the discretion to waive penalties if it decides there was no intent to evade the tax. The government's rationale is all about capturing lost revenue. Officials argue that payments for these digital services have been flowing offshore without contributing any income or value-added tax, putting local businesses at a disadvantage. The policy shift directly responds to the massive growth in digital consumption, with Zimbabweans spending millions annually on foreign platforms for entertainment, advertising, and e-commerce. [/QUOTE]
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Labrish
Nyuuz
Zim users now taxed 15% on Netflix, Spotify, and more
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