Tanzania’s small and medium enterprise (SME) sector is one of the fastest-growing in East Africa, with logistics companies in Dar es Salaam to tour operators in Arusha, law firms in Dodoma, and clinics across the country. Yet most SME owners either carry no insurance or hold inadequate cover because they are unsure where to start. A single uninsured incident can destroy years of work overnight.
Here are the five covers every Tanzanian SME should have in place.
1. WIBA (Workers’ Injury Benefits Act Insurance)
This is not optional. The Workers’ Injury Benefits Act makes it legally compulsory for every employer in Tanzania to insure their workers against occupational injury and death. Operating without valid WIBA cover exposes a business owner to unlimited personal liability for any workplace injury, with no cap on compensation.
What it covers:
- Medical costs for all work-related injuries
- Compensation for permanent disability resulting from a workplace accident
- Death benefits paid to the dependants of a fatally injured worker
What it costs: Typically 0.5%–1.5% of total annual payroll, depending on your industry’s risk classification. For a business with TZS 50 million in annual payroll, WIBA premiums might range from TZS 250,000 to TZS 750,000 per year.
2. Fire and Allied Perils Insurance
Whether you rent or own your business premises, fire insurance protects you against one of the most financially catastrophic and statistically common risks. In Tanzania, electrical fires, arson, and cooking-related fires cause significant commercial losses every year.
What it covers:
- Fire, lightning, and explosion damage to the building and its contents
- Riot, strike, and civil commotion
- Windstorm, hail, and flood (under the “Allied Perils” extension)
- Business contents: stock, machinery, furniture, and equipment
A standard fire policy for a small retail shop in Kariakoo carrying TZS 15 million in stock might cost TZS 180,000–350,000 per year. That is less than TZS 1,000 per day to protect an asset that took years to build.
3. Marine and Transit Insurance
If your business moves goods, whether importing from China, exporting produce, or delivering locally within Tanzania, you need marine and transit insurance. Most SME owners assume the transport company’s insurance covers their cargo. In practice, carrier liability is severely limited by contract.
What it covers:
- Goods in transit by sea, road, or air
- Loss or damage due to accident, fire, theft, or handling errors
- Inland transit (truck deliveries within Tanzania)
- Open covers for businesses with regular shipments (one annual policy covers all movements)
For a Dar es Salaam importer bringing in TZS 30 million of goods per shipment, transit insurance might cost 0.1%–0.3% of the cargo value, around TZS 30,000–90,000 per shipment.
4. Public Liability Insurance
If a customer slips and falls in your restaurant, if your electrician accidentally causes a client’s office fire, or if your delivery driver damages a third party’s vehicle, you face potential legal claims that can reach millions of shillings. Public liability insurance absorbs those costs.
What it covers:
- Third-party bodily injury occurring on your premises or as a result of your business operations
- Property damage caused to third parties by you or your employees
- Legal defence costs, even if the claim against you is ultimately unsuccessful
What it costs: TZS 150,000–500,000 per year for most small businesses, depending on the nature and scale of operations.
5. Business Interruption Insurance
This is the most overlooked cover in the SME sector, and the one that most often determines whether a business recovers from a major incident or closes permanently.
Fire insurance pays to repair or rebuild your premises. But who pays your staff salaries, rent, loan repayments, and utility bills during the months your business cannot operate? Business interruption insurance does.
What it covers:
- Loss of gross profit during the indemnity period (typically 6–24 months, selected at inception)
- Ongoing fixed costs: rent, salaries, loan interest, during the restoration period
- Increased costs of working to maintain operations from an alternative location
How to Get Started
The most common mistake SME owners make is buying insurance at the lowest available price without understanding what the policy actually covers. A cheaper policy with restrictive exclusions is often worth less than no insurance at all, because it creates a false sense of security.
Working with a TIRA-licensed broker like NENO means your cover is structured by someone who understands your specific business risks, not a generic quote generated from a standard form.
To get a tailored assessment of your SME’s insurance needs, contact our team. The conversation is free and takes less than 30 minutes.