Starting September 1, 2026, Tajikistan will tax transactions routed through electronic wallets, mobile apps, and QR-code payments. The Agency for Innovation and Digital Technologies, which announced the measure, cast it as a pilot project to pull unregistered entrepreneurs into the tax net. The relevant order was signed on April 1 and registered by the Ministry of Justice on April 16, 2026.
The scheme assembles a single digital system into which banks, e-wallet operators, and QR services feed data on every transaction. The National Bank of Tajikistan, designated the system’s operator, receives each recipient’s wallet number, bank card number, and taxpayer identification number, then analyzes the volume, size, and regularity of incoming payments. If one person collects more than 10 commercial payments from different senders in a single day, the system flags the account to tax authorities. More than 80 transfers from different people in a month triggers a separate review of whether the recipient is quietly running a business. Inspectors then have 10 days to rule, and can register the person as an individual entrepreneur automatically.
For operations through e-wallets and the unified QR code, the rate is set at 3 percent — 1.5 percent as the system’s tax, 0.5 percent as a social tax, and 1 percent returned to the buyer as cashback. Cash and card payments outside wallets carry the same 3 percent but no cashback. For entrepreneurs already registered, the rate on wallet operations drops from 6 to 3 percent. The National Bank debits the tax directly from the recipient’s account, without the client’s confirmation.
The trouble lies in the gray zones. Once a wallet is flagged as commercial, the tax may apply to all incoming funds — including transfers from relatives. Tajikistan has no self-employed regime comparable to Kazakhstan’s, and the system offers no clear mechanism to separate business income from the everyday transfers that carry wedding contributions, medical costs, school collections, and remittances from family abroad. Service workers already paying a fixed patent tax — hairdressers, manicurists, taxi drivers — face the prospect of a second charge on income they also receive by transfer. The National Bank insists personal and family transfers will not be taxed, but has not explained how the system will tell them apart.
The project is billed as a two-year pilot, during which routine tax inspections are suspended and the period left exempt from later audit.
Digital payments are an obvious target because they have grown fast. The number of electronic wallets in Tajikistan reached 15.7 million by mid-2025, up roughly 51 percent year-on-year, and Tajiks made 56.3 million cashless transactions worth 19.4 billion somoni (about $2 billion) in the first half of 2025 alone. Cashless payments now account for 28.2 percent of all payments.
The move fits a familiar pattern. In 2021, the Tax Committee gave the country’s bloggers until April 1 to register and pay taxes on advertising income, prompting complaints that revenues were far too small to bother — one YouTuber said his channel had earned $101 in a year. By 2023, officials had clarified that a registered blogger pays 6 percent of gross income while an unregistered one owes 15 percent. Researchers noted at the time that Dushanbe routinely reaches for new taxes to cover budget shortfalls, and that enforcement doubles as leverage over citizens active online.
That leverage carries weight in a country where the informal sector is estimated at around 38 percent of economic activity and tax revenue hovers near 11 percent of GDP, well below the global average. The e-wallet levy promises small businesses lower rates and simpler bookkeeping, but it also hands the state a real-time ledger of who receives money, from whom, and how often.
