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Sudan Guide · Payroll & Tax

How to Process Payroll in Sudan: Complete Guide

Running payroll in Sudan means more than paying salaries — it means correctly deducting and remitting statutory contributions, meeting filing deadlines, and maintaining records…

Running payroll in Sudan means more than paying salaries — it means correctly deducting and remitting statutory contributions, meeting filing deadlines, and maintaining records that satisfy Sudan labour and tax authorities. This guide covers every step.

Why Accurate Payroll Matters in Sudan

Errors in Sudan payroll can result in penalties from the tax authority, back-payments of statutory contributions, and employee disputes. Using a payroll system built for Sudan removes this risk entirely by keeping rates current and calculations automatic.

Step 1 — Register as an Employer

Every business paying staff in Sudan must register with the relevant authorities before processing the first payroll run. Registration gives you a tax PIN or employer number used on all payroll submissions. Keep your registration certificates in a safe location — you will need them for audits.

Step 2 — Understand Your Statutory Obligations

Employers in Sudan are required to calculate, deduct, and remit the following statutory contributions on behalf of employees:

  • PAYE (Pay As You Earn)
  • Pension Fund

Each deduction has its own rate, ceiling, and remittance deadline. Missing a deadline incurs interest and penalties, so set up automated reminders or use payroll software that handles filing for you.

Step 3 — Set Up Your Payroll Cycle

Most Sudan businesses pay monthly, though weekly and bi-weekly cycles are permitted. Whatever cycle you choose, the payroll run must be completed, approved, and statutory deductions remitted by the legally prescribed dates each period.

Key tasks in each payroll cycle:

  • Verify employee hours, overtime, and allowances
  • Calculate gross pay for each employee
  • Apply all statutory deductions in the correct order
  • Generate payslips and distribute to employees
  • Remit statutory deductions to the relevant authorities
  • File required returns

Step 4 — Issue Payslips

Under Sudan employment law, employees are entitled to a written payslip detailing gross pay, all deductions, and net pay. Payslips should be provided on or before each pay date and retained for at least five years.

Step 5 — Remit Statutory Deductions on Time

Late remittance of statutory deductions in Sudan attracts penalties and interest. Set a recurring calendar reminder for the remittance deadline of each statutory body. Most deadlines fall within the first two weeks of the following month.

Annual Payroll Obligations

Beyond monthly payroll, Sudan employers have annual obligations including filing end-of-year returns, issuing P9 or equivalent tax certificates to employees, and reconciling statutory contribution accounts.

Automate Sudan Payroll

SmartHR Africa is built specifically for African payroll compliance. It automatically applies the latest Sudan statutory rates, generates compliant payslips, and reminds you of every filing deadline — so your team gets paid on time and your business stays fully compliant in 2026.

Automate Sudan Payroll

Let SmartHR Africa handle all Sudan statutory compliance automatically.