KAMPALA – Under Uganda’s Income Tax Act, a simple but powerful rule sits quietly in Section 18(1): a resident person’s gross income includes “income derived from all geographical sources.” It is a sentence that most people skim past, but today it is the legal engine behind one of the biggest tax compliances drives the country has ever pursued. Few taxpayers realize that Uganda doesn’t just tax income earned within its borders; it also claims taxing rights over income earned abroad if the individual remains resident under Section 9. That rule, long ignored by many, is now roaring to life.
For years, Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) focused heavily on local salaries, business income, and domestic rentals, largely because those were visible. But the world has changed. Banking secrecy is fading, international data-sharing has tightened, and global transparency standards under the OECD’s Automatic Exchange of Information (AEOI) mean a person’s financial footprints abroad are no longer exclusively theirs to hide. It is against this backdrop that URA recently issued a public notice requiring Ugandans with foreign income, accounts, or property to declare their global income within seven days of notification, a move that jolted many who assumed income abroad was outside URA’s reach. In truth, nothing in the notice is new. The law has always required global income declaration; the only difference today is that URA finally has the tools to enforce it.
This enforcement push comes at a time when Uganda’s diaspora footprint is both large and economically significant. Estimates place the number of Ugandans working or earning abroad at over two million, spread across the Middle East, Europe, North America, neighboring East African states, and parts of Asia. Their economic contribution is profound. Remittances alone reached approximately USD 1.5 billion last year, making them one of the country’s leading sources of foreign exchange, often surpassing the earnings from coffee. Yet remittances tell only a partial story. Much of the income earned abroad by Ugandan tax residents never returns home. Foreign salaries are consumed abroad, offshore rentals are reinvested, and consultancy payments remain in foreign accounts. Add to that the rise of digital and platform-based income, online freelancing, remote employment, crypto trading, international gigs, and Uganda’s offshore income pool expands significantly. This is the untaxed segment URA is now pursuing.
The law’s starting point is simple: residency. Under Section 9, a person is resident for tax purposes if they have a permanent home in Uganda, if they spend 183 days here in any 12 months, or if they average 122 days per year over three consecutive years. Many Ugandans living glamorous global lives still retain permanent homes, families, or business roots here. They may earn abroad, but in the eyes of the Act, they remain Ugandan tax residents. Once residency is established, Sections 4 and 18 activate worldwide taxation. Whether income comes from a job in Qatar, rentals in Canada, or consultancy fees from Europe, it should appear in the taxpayer’s annual return. Where foreign taxes are paid, Section 77 grants a foreign tax credit to avoid double taxation.
Yet this is the very obligation many have ignored, some unknowingly, others deliberately. It is here that the danger now lies. Failure to disclose foreign income is not simply a technical fault. Under the Tax Procedures Code Act, non-disclosure can trigger interest, penalties, assessments, and, in severe cases, fraud proceedings. When URA detects foreign income through AEOI data, it can reconstruct past returns, estimate undeclared earnings, and issue assessments based on available information, often unfavorable to the taxpayer. In cases of continued concealment, URA may impose penalties for omission, negligence, or intentional evasion. These provisions give weight to the seven-day notice: the window is short because URA already has the information, it is simply giving the taxpayer a chance to explain themselves before a harsher route is taken.
Consider Isaac, a 38-year-old Ugandan living in Kyambogo with his wife and children. He works for a construction firm in Kampala, earning a salary taxed under PAYE. What most people don’t know is that Isaac also consults remotely for a Dutch engineering firm. They pay him into a Euro account in Rotterdam. Additionally, he co-owns a residential unit in Doha, and the rent collected each month remains abroad. Isaac assumed this money was not relevant for URA because it never enters Uganda. However, Isaac’s permanent home, wife, and dependents all live here; legally, he is a resident. The law requires him to declare those earnings. He could claim a foreign tax credit if the Netherlands taxed him, but the obligation to disclose remains unchanged. With the new enforcement mechanisms, URA could receive the Euro account data through AEOI, send Isaac a compliance notice, and require full disclosure for the last several years. If he delays or ignores this, URA is legally permitted to raise an estimated assessment, and he will shoulder the burden of disproving it.
Isaac’s case mirrors the lived realities of many Ugandans whose earnings straddle borders. And as transparency deepens, the room for ambiguity narrows. The principle is neither punitive nor novel. It is consistent with global practice. Countries like the UK, Canada, and Australia rigorously enforce worldwide income taxation for residents. Even the United States goes a step further by taxing its citizens regardless of residence. Uganda is not reinventing anything; it is finally operationalizing what its statutes have always said.
For every Ugandan resident who earns, invests, saves, or trades beyond our borders, this is the moment to take stock with absolute honesty. The legal framework governing worldwide income is not new, and the global systems that enforce transparency are no longer optional. URA now stands in a position where foreign accounts, offshore rentals, digital income streams, and remote employment footprints can be matched against your tax history with remarkable precision. The wisest step is to review your affairs before URA reviews them for you. Declare what the law already requires, regularize what has been missed, and document what must be defended. Early voluntary compliance is not merely a procedural exercise; it is protection for your reputation, stability for your finances, and clarity for your future. The world has changed; the safest taxpayers will be those who change with it.
The writer is a Chartered Accountant and a Chartered Tax Advisor.
