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The gold discovery Uganda made international headlines for in June 2026, with government officials citing an estimated 31 million tonnes of gold-bearing ore and a potential refined-gold value widely reported in the trillions of dollars, has triggered an immediate surge of interest from mining investors, project developers and policy teams worldwide. Yet the wall-to-wall media coverage has, so far, been overwhelmingly focused on the headline figures and almost entirely silent on the legal architecture that will determine who can actually extract, profit from and regulate the resource.
This article fills that gap by mapping the ownership rules, licensing pathway, fiscal obligations, environmental requirements, community-engagement duties and dispute-risk factors that every stakeholder must understand before committing capital, granting access or negotiating terms. It is intended as a practical, jurisdiction-specific roadmap, grounded in the Mining and Minerals Act, 2022 (MMA 2022), the Mining Cadastre and Registry System (MCRS) procedures, Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) guidance, and the Minerals and Mining Policy 2018, for investors, landowners, in-house counsel and government officials navigating the aftermath of one of Africa’s most significant mineral announcements in a generation.
In early June 2026, the Ugandan government announced survey results indicating the presence of approximately 31 million tonnes of gold-bearing ore across several districts. Media outlets rapidly translated that figure into an estimated refined-gold equivalent and an eye-catching valuation, prompting comparisons with some of the world’s largest known gold deposits. Government statements positioned the discovery as transformative for Uganda’s export earnings, foreign-exchange reserves and industrialisation ambitions.
For investors, the immediate question is not whether the figure is large, it plainly is, but whether it is reliable and, critically, what legal steps are required to convert geological potential into enforceable mineral rights. For landowners in affected districts, the priority is understanding how their surface rights interact with the State’s sovereign mineral ownership. For government agencies, the challenge is balancing rapid development with regulatory integrity, fiscal capture and environmental protection.
Industry observers expect the discovery to accelerate licensing activity on the MCRS portal, trigger a fresh wave of exploration-licence applications and intensify parliamentary scrutiny of the fiscal terms offered to foreign investors. The practical effect will be a compression of timelines: stakeholders who move methodically through the legal and regulatory steps outlined below will be better positioned than those who react solely to headlines.
No responsible investor should commit capital to a mining project on the strength of a government press statement alone. The 31 million tonnes figure, as reported in local and international media, refers to estimated gold-bearing ore, not refined gold. Converting that estimate into a bankable resource requires independent verification against internationally recognised reporting standards.
The two most widely accepted frameworks are the Joint Ore Reserves Committee Code (JORC), used primarily in Australian and African capital markets, and Canada’s National Instrument 43-101 (NI 43-101). Both require a Competent Person or Qualified Person, a geologist with relevant experience and professional accreditation, to classify resources into Inferred, Indicated and Measured categories. Until the Ugandan discovery has been classified under one of these standards, headline figures should be treated as preliminary exploration data rather than proven reserves.
Investors should engage a Competent Person or Qualified Person who is independent of both the licence holder and the government to prepare a resource estimate compliant with JORC or NI 43-101. This process typically takes three to six months and costs between USD 150,000 and USD 500,000 for a deposit of this reported scale, depending on the accessibility of the site and the volume of drilling data already available. The resulting Technical Report becomes the foundational document for project financing, joint-venture negotiations and listing on international stock exchanges.
It is also prudent to identify the corporate entity that conducted the initial exploration. The difference between the discoverer and the titleholder is legally significant: the entity named on the exploration licence registered with MCRS holds the enforceable rights, regardless of who performed the fieldwork. Corporate identification matters for contractual due diligence, beneficial-ownership checks and reputational risk screening.
Under Ugandan law, all minerals belong to the Government, held on behalf of the Republic. The MMA 2022, as passed by Parliament, establishes this foundational principle unambiguously: mineral rights are severed from surface-land rights, and no private landowner, whether holding freehold, leasehold, mailo or customary tenure, has automatic entitlement to minerals found beneath or on their land. This sovereign-ownership model is common across East Africa and is consistent with the approach taken in most resource-rich jurisdictions globally.
The practical consequence is significant. A landowner in Karamoja, Busia or any other district within the discovery area cannot lawfully extract, sell or grant extraction rights to gold without a licence issued under the MMA 2022 and registered on the MCRS. Conversely, the Government cannot simply access private land without following the statutory process: exploration and mining licence holders are required to obtain the surface owner’s consent or, failing that, to invoke the compulsory-access provisions set out in the Act, which include compensation obligations.
The MMA 2022 distinguishes between mineral ownership (which vests in the State) and land ownership (which remains with the titleholder). When a mining licence is granted over privately held land, the licence holder must negotiate compensation for disturbance, loss of use and any damage to crops, structures or improvements. If negotiations fail, the Act provides for a dispute-resolution mechanism that may ultimately involve compulsory access upon payment of assessed compensation. Surface owners are not entitled to royalties by virtue of land ownership alone, although community development agreements (discussed below) may provide for benefit-sharing arrangements.
The MMA 2022 is the primary statute. Industry observers expect the 2026 amendment proposals currently under discussion to tighten compulsory-acquisition timelines, increase transparency in licence allocation and expand the circumstances in which the State may reserve areas for national-interest projects. Investors and landowners should monitor parliamentary proceedings and any gazetted statutory instruments closely, as Uganda’s mining law changes in 2026 may alter the balance of rights between licence holders, surface owners and the Government.
Securing the legal right to explore for and extract gold in Uganda requires registration on the MCRS and the grant of appropriate licences by DGSM. The MMA 2022 establishes a tiered licensing structure, each tier conferring progressively broader rights and imposing correspondingly greater obligations. Every licence application must be lodged through the MCRS portal, and no rights accrue until the licence is formally granted and registered.
Where an exploration licence already covers the discovery area, the existing licence holder generally enjoys priority rights to apply for a mining lease over the same area, subject to compliance with licence conditions and work-programme commitments. New applicants cannot ordinarily obtain overlapping rights. However, the MMA 2022 empowers the Minister to reserve areas for purposes of national interest, which could affect both new applications and renewals. Licence holders should immediately verify the status of their licences on the MCRS, confirm that all work-programme obligations and reporting requirements are current, and seek legal advice on any transitional provisions introduced by the 2026 amendments.
| Licence Type | Key Rights | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Prospecting Licence | Limited search and sampling rights over a defined area; non-exclusive in certain circumstances | 6–12 months |
| Exploration Licence | Exclusive right to explore, drill, sample and evaluate mineral deposits within the licence area | 1–3 years (renewable) |
| Mining Lease | Full production, processing and export rights; obligation to develop and operate within approved plan | Negotiation period + government/parliamentary approvals; 21 years typical duration |
The fiscal framework governing mining in Uganda is set by the MMA 2022, the Income Tax Act, value-added-tax legislation and specific regulations issued by the URA. Gold-mining operations are subject to a layered set of obligations, royalties, corporate income tax, withholding taxes on payments to non-residents, and potential equity participation by the State, that collectively determine the project’s economic viability and the investor’s net return.
Royalties on gold are calculated as a percentage of the gross value of mineral production and are payable to the Government. The specific rate is set by regulation under the MMA 2022 and may vary depending on the mineral type and the processing stage. Royalty returns must be filed with both URA and DGSM. Industry observers note that discussions around the 2026 amendment proposals include potential upward revisions to royalty rates for high-value minerals, reflecting the Government’s stated intention to increase its share of resource revenues. Investors should model multiple royalty scenarios in their financial projections and ensure their mining agreements include clear definitions of “gross value” to avoid disputes over the royalty base.
For a comprehensive overview of Uganda’s evolving tax landscape, see the Uganda tax changes 2026 practical guide.
Mining companies operating in Uganda are liable for corporate income tax at the prevailing rate on their chargeable income. Payments to non-resident contractors, service providers and affiliates attract withholding tax, and the URA has been increasingly active in scrutinising transfer-pricing arrangements in the extractive sector. Investors structuring cross-border supply chains, management-fee arrangements or intercompany loans should ensure that all related-party transactions are at arm’s length and documented in accordance with Uganda’s transfer-pricing rules. Failure to do so can result in reassessments, penalties and, in severe cases, criminal prosecution.
The MMA 2022 provides for the State to acquire a free-carried interest in large-scale mining projects. The percentage and terms of state participation are subject to negotiation and are typically set out in the mining agreement. Early indications suggest that the Government may seek a significant equity position in projects arising from the gold discovery, consistent with its broader policy of ensuring that Ugandans benefit directly from the country’s natural resources.
| Entity Type | Reporting & Payment Obligations | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Mining licence holder | Royalty returns; corporate income tax; monthly/quarterly production reports to URA & DGSM | Monthly/quarterly filings; annual audit |
| Refinery / Exporter | Excise/export duty; VAT/customs declarations; export permits from DGSM and relevant authorities | Before export + periodic returns |
| Contractor / Service provider | Withholding tax reporting; VAT invoicing; compliance with transfer-pricing documentation requirements | With every payment cycle |
Uganda’s Minerals and Mining Policy 2018, reinforced by the MMA 2022, places substantial emphasis on local content, the requirement that mining operations maximise the use of Ugandan labour, goods, services and expertise. Licence holders are expected to submit and implement local-content plans covering employment quotas (particularly at non-specialist levels), procurement from Ugandan suppliers and investment in local skills development. Non-compliance can jeopardise licence renewals and trigger regulatory sanctions.
Beyond local content, the Government has signalled a growing focus on national-security dimensions of large mineral finds. The likely practical effect will be enhanced scrutiny of beneficial-ownership structures, restrictions on the involvement of certain foreign-state-linked entities, and requirements for in-country refining and value-addition before export. Investors should anticipate that national-security screening will become a standard component of the licensing process for projects of this scale.
Environmental compliance is a precondition for the grant of any exploration licence or mining lease under Ugandan law. The National Environment Act and the MMA 2022 together establish a sequential permitting process that must be initiated at the earliest stage of project development, ideally before significant ground disturbance occurs. Failure to obtain environmental approvals before commencing operations is a criminal offence and grounds for licence revocation.
The environmental permitting pathway follows a defined sequence: environmental screening, full Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), preparation and approval of an Environmental Management and Monitoring Plan (EMMP), and the grant of an environmental permit. For large-scale gold mining, a full EIA is almost certainly required, and the process involves public consultation, baseline ecological surveys and the identification of mitigation measures.
| Permit / Approval | Issuing Authority | Typical Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Environmental screening decision | NEMA | 30–60 days from submission |
| Full EIA and public consultation | NEMA (with DGSM input) | 6–12 months |
| EMMP approval | NEMA | Concurrent with or following EIA approval |
| Environmental permit / Certificate of Approval | NEMA | Upon EIA and EMMP approval |
| Mine-closure and rehabilitation bond | DGSM / NEMA | Before commencement of mining operations |
Investors should commission baseline environmental and social-impact studies at the earliest stage of project planning. These studies serve as the foundation for the EIA, inform community-engagement strategies and, critically, establish the pre-mining environmental condition against which rehabilitation obligations will be measured at closure.
A community development agreement (CDA) is a legally binding contract between a mining licence holder and the host community, designed to ensure that the community shares in the benefits of mining and is compensated for its impacts. Under the MMA 2022, CDAs are mandatory for large-scale mining operations and must be negotiated before the commencement of production. The agreement typically covers employment and training commitments, financial contributions to community projects, environmental-management obligations and grievance-resolution mechanisms.
For landowners, the CDA is the primary instrument through which non-royalty benefits flow. Compensation for land disturbance, loss of crops and resettlement, where required, is negotiated separately under the land-access provisions of the MMA 2022, but the CDA supplements this with ongoing benefit-sharing over the life of the mine. Landowners and community representatives should seek independent legal advice before entering into any CDA or compensation agreement, and should insist on transparent, auditable financial commitments.
Major discoveries attract disputes. The combination of high asset values, multiple stakeholders with competing interests, evolving regulatory frameworks and significant information asymmetries creates fertile ground for litigation, arbitration and administrative challenges. Proactive risk mitigation, through careful contract drafting and pre-agreed dispute-resolution mechanisms, is far more effective and cost-efficient than reactive litigation.
Investors, next 30/90/180 days:
Landowners, next 30/90/180 days:
Government agencies, next 30/90/180 days:
The 2026 gold discovery in Uganda represents an extraordinary opportunity, but also a complex legal, regulatory and commercial challenge for every stakeholder involved. The headline figures are dramatic, yet the path from geological promise to productive mine runs through a detailed legal framework that governs ownership, licensing, fiscal obligations, environmental compliance, community engagement and dispute resolution. Investors who proceed methodically, grounding each step in the MMA 2022 and verified geological data, will be best positioned to capture value while managing risk. Landowners who secure independent legal and valuation advice early will negotiate from a position of knowledge rather than vulnerability.
And government agencies that maintain regulatory transparency and predictability will attract the quality of investment that translates geological endowment into lasting national benefit. For jurisdiction-specific legal guidance on any aspect of Uganda’s mining regime, readers can connect with qualified mining-law practitioners through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Denis Kusaasira at ABMAK Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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