Egypt proposes VAT amendments to support healthcare services and medical manufacturing

Rasha Abdel Aal, head of the Egyptian Tax Authority, announced draft changes to the Value Added Tax Law that aim to ease costs for healthcare providers and medical manufacturers. The proposals are currently under discussion in the House of Representatives.

The amendments include lowering the VAT rate on medical devices from 14 percent to 5 percent. This reduction is intended to cut operating and production expenses for equipment and supplies.

The draft law also exempts manufacturing inputs for dialysis machines, components, supplies, and kidney filters from VAT. Officials say the exemption will lower costs for businesses and improve access to treatment for patients.

Abdel Aal stated that the measures align with government efforts to back sectors with strong social and healthcare roles. She added that the changes seek to boost local medical production and attract more investment in the field.

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Rasha Abdel Aal, head of the Egyptian Tax Authority, announced new executive instructions establishing a unified framework for VAT refund procedures to speed up processes and boost efficiency.

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Egypt’s medical supplies sector is preparing a memorandum to Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly calling for revisions to government procurement prices amid sharp rises in production and supply costs. The move follows measures announced by the Egyptian Authority for Unified Procurement to ease pressure on suppliers and ensure steady medical supplies availability.

Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk announced the launch of Egypt's first mobile application for real estate tax services on 15 June 2026. The app allows citizens to file returns, make payments and apply for exemptions digitally.

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Egypt's Ministry of Finance announced a 30.8% rise in tax revenues, equivalent to EGP 380.3 billion, during the first eight months of fiscal year 2025/2026, bringing totals to EGP 1.614 trillion from EGP 1.234 trillion a year earlier. The ministry attributed the growth to broad-based increases across most tax categories, fueled by business engagement and recent tax reforms.

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