New Business Regulations Signal Zimbabwe’s Push for Digital Compliance

The gazetting of Statutory Instrument (S.I.) 108 of 2025 has set a clear deadline for companies and private business corporations to re-register under the electronic registry system, marking a decisive step in Zimbabwe’s shift towards digital compliance and modern business governance.

According to the regulations, all business entities registered before the electronic registry was introduced must complete re-registration by April 20, 2026, or face automatic deregistration. The Ministry of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs has emphasized that failure to comply will result in companies being struck off the official register, effectively nullifying their legal status.

Sponsor Logo

Rainbow Hotels — Experience Luxury Across Zimbabwe

Rainbow Hotels continues to redefine hospitality standards in Zimbabwe, offering world-class accommodation, fine dining, and modern conference facilities in Harare, Bulawayo, and Victoria Falls.

Whether for business or leisure, Rainbow Hotels delivers unmatched comfort, exceptional service, and a truly premium guest experience tailored to modern travellers.

Book Now
Sponsored Content

This move reflects a broader effort by government to sanitize the corporate landscape by ensuring only active and compliant businesses remain recognized. Zimbabwe has long faced challenges with dormant “shelf companies,” outdated records, and entities that exist only on paper but continue to distort the investment climate.

By enforcing re-registration, authorities aim to purge the register of inactive players, making it easier to track legitimate entities and create a more transparent operating environment.Analysts note that the electronic registry system represents more than administrative efficiency.

It is part of Zimbabwe’s effort to align with global best practices where digital corporate governance frameworks enhance ease of doing business, facilitate investment due diligence, and reduce the risk of fraud. A clean, digitized register also strengthens the government’s ability to enforce tax compliance, monitor ownership structures, and track corporate accountability.

However, the regulation also places a burden on companies, particularly small and informal entities that may struggle with the re-registration process due to limited knowledge or resources. There is growing debate on whether the 2026 deadline will be sufficient for all affected businesses, especially those in rural or under-resourced areas where access to the electronic system may be limited.

What is clear is that S.I. 108 of 2025 is not a mere administrative directive. It represents a turning point in how Zimbabwe envisions its corporate ecosystem: streamlined, accountable, and digitally anchored.

Whether businesses embrace the process smoothly, or whether the deadline triggers a wave of deregistrations, will be a critical test of both government’s resolve and the corporate sector’s adaptability.

News

Harare Water Upgrade Signals Shift Toward Infrastructure Led Service Recovery

By Aldridge Dzvene The rehabilitation of Morton Jaffray Waterworks marks a pivotal moment in Harare’s efforts to resolve its long standing water crisis, with authorities moving to double production capacity under the National Development Strategy 2. Rainbow Hotels — Experience Luxury Across Zimbabwe Rainbow Hotels continues to redefine hospitality standards in Zimbabwe, offering world-class accommodation, […]

Read More
News

Cabinet briefing signals shift in agriculture, policy, delivery

Zimbabwe’s Twelfth Post-Cabinet Briefing, chaired by Information Minister Zhemu Soda, goes beyond routine updates, pointing instead to a subtle but important shift in how government is aligning production, policy reform and delivery under the National Development Strategy 2. What stands out is not just the scale of agricultural output, but the attempt to tighten the […]

Read More
News

Zimbabwe telecoms surge, data drives growth and strain

Zimbabwe’s telecommunications sector closed 2025 with a clear message, the digital economy is no longer emerging, it is consolidating. The fourth quarter performance report by the Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe reveals a sector experiencing structural transformation, where data has overtaken traditional services, infrastructure investment is accelerating, and competitive dynamics are sharpening. However, […]

Read More