On 30 March 2026, Zambia’s Cabinet approved a significant but temporary intervention in the fuel market. Effective 1 April 2026 and running through 30 June 2026, Value Added Tax on petrol and diesel imports was reduced to zero percent. Simultaneously, excise duty on the same products was suspended for the same three-month period. The stated objective was straightforward: to mitigate the impact of rising global energy prices on Zambian consumers and businesses. But for transport operators, logistics companies, and any business that runs a fleet of vehicles, this three-month window represents both a significant cash flow opportunity and a compliance challenge that will demand careful navigation.

The scale of the relief is material. Under normal circumstances, petrol and diesel attract VAT at the standard rate of sixteen percent in Zambia. For a transport company that spends fifty thousand kwacha per month on fuel, the VAT component alone is eight thousand kwacha. That is cash that normally leaves the business at the point of purchase and is only recoverable later through the VAT return process, assuming the business is fully compliant and has sufficient output VAT to offset the input claim. For three months, that eight thousand kwacha stays in the business. Across a fleet of ten trucks, the cumulative cash flow benefit can run into hundreds of thousands of kwacha.

The immediate impact is at the pump. Fuel retailers will invoice for petrol and diesel without adding the sixteen percent VAT line item. Excise duty, which is normally embedded in the pump price, is also suspended. This should translate directly into lower retail prices. The government has communicated that the measure is designed to provide direct relief to consumers and businesses alike. For transport operators, the lower input cost improves margins on fixed-price contracts and creates room to offer more competitive rates on new business.

But the relief is not automatic for every litre of fuel purchased. The zero rating applies specifically to petrol and diesel imports. It does not apply to lubricants, greases, or other petroleum products. It does not apply to fuel purchased before 1 April 2026 or after 30 June 2026. The three-month window is fixed and will not be extended unless Cabinet makes a further intervention. Businesses must ensure that their fuel purchases during this period are properly documented with invoices that clearly show the zero-rated VAT treatment. These invoices will be required to support the VAT return for the period.

The cash flow benefit is most pronounced for businesses that are registered for VAT and normally claim input VAT on fuel purchases. Under the standard VAT regime, a transport company pays VAT at the pump, records it as input VAT, and offsets it against output VAT collected from customers. The timing difference between paying the VAT and recovering it through the return process creates a working capital drag. For three months, that drag disappears. The business simply pays the VAT-exclusive price and moves on.

For businesses that are not registered for VAT, the benefit is different but still meaningful. These businesses normally bear the full cost of VAT as an expense because they cannot claim input credits. The sixteen percent VAT is simply a cost of doing business. During the zero-rating period, that cost evaporates. The non-registered business pays the lower, VAT-exclusive price and enjoys a direct reduction in operating expenses.

The compliance dimension is where many businesses will stumble. The Zambia Revenue Authority will expect VAT returns for the April, May, and June 2026 periods to accurately reflect the zero-rated fuel purchases. This means that fuel invoices must be retained, the zero-rated supplies must be correctly coded in the VAT return, and the business must be able to demonstrate that the fuel was purchased within the specified window. A fuel invoice dated 2 April 2026 showing zero-rated VAT is compliant. A fuel invoice dated 31 March 2026 showing standard-rated VAT, even if paid in April, is not entitled to the relief.

The transition back to standard VAT in July 2026 will require equal attention. On 1 July, the sixteen percent VAT and the applicable excise duty will snap back into effect. Businesses that have adjusted their pricing models or customer contracts to reflect the lower fuel costs must be prepared to revert. A transport contract signed in May that priced services based on zero-rated fuel will become unprofitable in July if not adjusted. The prudent approach is to treat the three-month relief as a temporary windfall rather than a permanent structural change, and to avoid locking in long-term pricing commitments based on the temporary rate.

The excise duty suspension adds a further layer of benefit. Excise duty on petrol and diesel is a specific charge per litre, not an ad valorem percentage. Its suspension, combined with the VAT zero rating, represents the maximum possible relief on fuel costs short of an outright subsidy. For businesses that operate on thin margins, this combined relief can be the difference between a profitable quarter and a loss-making one.

The broader context of this intervention matters. Global energy prices have been volatile, driven by geopolitical tensions and supply chain disruptions. Zambia, as a net importer of refined petroleum products, is directly exposed to these global price movements. The government’s decision to use the VAT and excise system to cushion the impact reflects a preference for targeted, time-bound fiscal interventions over permanent subsidies, which have historically proven unsustainable and distortionary.

For transport businesses, the strategic question is how to use this three-month window most effectively. One approach is to accelerate scheduled maintenance and capital expenditure during this period, using the improved cash flow to fund investments that will yield long-term efficiency gains. Another approach is to build a cash reserve to cushion the impact of the July reversion to standard rates. A third approach is to renegotiate customer contracts to lock in volume commitments, using the temporary cost advantage as a competitive lever to secure market share.

The documentation requirements cannot be overstated. Every fuel invoice from April through June 2026 should be reviewed to confirm that VAT is shown as zero percent. Invoices that incorrectly charge standard VAT should be rejected or corrected before payment. The ZRA has indicated that it will monitor compliance closely during this period, and businesses that claim input VAT on fuel purchases that were actually zero-rated will face adjustments, penalties, and interest.

Conclusion

The three-month fuel VAT zero rating is a significant but temporary intervention. For transport businesses in Zambia, it offers a rare window of improved cash flow and reduced operating costs. The businesses that benefit most will be those that understand the precise scope of the relief, document their purchases correctly, and plan carefully for the transition back to standard rates in July. The window is open. Use it wisely.