RC-IVA (Complementary Tax to VAT): 13% flat rate on net salary after deducting 3 minimum monthly salaries (~BOB 7,086). Employees can offset against personal VAT receipts. Employee AFP pension ~10%. Santa Cruz is LATAM's fastest-growing business hub.
On a monthly salary of BOB 12,000 (~$1,740) in Santa Cruz: RC-IVA base = BOB 12,000 − BOB 7,086 deduction = BOB 4,914. RC-IVA = 13% × 4,914 = BOB 639 (~$93). AFP pension = 10% × 12,000 = BOB 1,200. Total deductions: BOB 1,839 (15.3%). Net take-home: BOB 10,161 (~$1,472). If you present VAT receipts for, say, BOB 4,914 of personal spending (receipts from shops, restaurants, etc.), the 13% VAT on those purchases = BOB 639 — completely offsetting your RC-IVA liability. Result: effectively 0% income tax, only the 10% pension contribution.
Bolivia uses a unique personal income tax system called the RC-IVA (Régimen Complementario al Impuesto al Valor Agregado) — the Complementary Tax to VAT. Rather than a conventional income tax, employees pay 13% on their net monthly salary after deducting the equivalent of three national minimum salaries (currently BOB 2,362 × 3 = BOB 7,086/month, ~$1,025). A further key feature: employees can offset their RC-IVA liability by presenting personal fiscal receipts (from groceries, restaurants, utilities, etc.) — any VAT paid (also 13%) on personal purchases reduces the RC-IVA owed. In practice, many Bolivian employees have very low or zero effective income tax after using the deduction and VAT offsets. Employers submit the consolidated monthly RC-IVA return and withhold the tax. An additional AFP (private pension) contribution of approximately 10% of gross salary goes to the worker's individual pension account. Bolivia is home to one of South America's fastest-growing economies, anchored by natural gas exports and a booming agribusiness sector centred on Santa Cruz.
| Taxable Income | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| Deduction: 3 minimum salaries (BOB 7,086/month) | 0% (exempt) |
| Net salary above BOB 7,086/month | 13% RC-IVA |
| Less: VAT offset from personal receipts | 13% on eligible purchases |
| AFP pension contribution (employee) | ~10% of gross salary |
Note: These are marginal rates - you only pay the higher rate on income within each bracket.
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Get Health Insurance for Bolivia →Bolivia's personal income tax is called the RC-IVA (Régimen Complementario al Impuesto al Valor Agregado) — Complementary Regime to VAT. It operates at a flat 13% rate on employment income. The tax is calculated on gross monthly salary after deducting three national minimum salaries (BOB 2,362 × 3 = BOB 7,086 in 2025, ~$1,025). Employees can further reduce their RC-IVA by presenting valid VAT receipts from personal purchases — any 13% VAT already paid on goods and services can offset the RC-IVA liability. The employer withholds and remits RC-IVA monthly. The Servicio de Impuestos Nacionales (SIN) at impuestos.gob.bo is Bolivia's tax authority.
Bolivia's RC-IVA includes a unique 'fiscal receipt' (factura) system. Every purchase you make in Bolivia — groceries, restaurants, utilities, clothing, entertainment — should come with an official fiscal receipt (factura) showing 13% VAT. The VAT paid on these personal purchases (13%) can directly offset your monthly RC-IVA liability. For example: if your RC-IVA liability is BOB 639 for the month, and you submit receipts for BOB 4,914 of purchases (BOB 639 in VAT paid = 13% × 4,914), your RC-IVA is reduced to zero. This system incentivises consumers to demand official receipts and keeps the informal economy in check. In practice, most Bolivians with average salaries end up with very low or zero effective income tax after the deduction and receipt offsets.
Bolivia has a private pension system (AFP — Administradoras de Fondos de Pensiones). Employee contributions total approximately 10% of gross salary (pension fund 10%, with additional small risk/administration fees). Employer contributions also apply. The system is a defined-contribution individual account model — your contributions build up in your personal AFP account for retirement. AFP managers include Futuro de Bolivia and BBVA Previsión AFP. Retirement benefits are based on accumulated savings. Note: Bolivia also has a semi-contributory government pension called Renta Dignidad, a universal pension for all Bolivians over 60.
Santa Cruz de la Sierra is Bolivia's economic capital and one of Latin America's fastest-growing cities. Unlike La Paz (the administrative capital at 3,600m altitude), Santa Cruz sits at 416m in a tropical lowland climate — making it much more accessible for expats. The city has a dynamic business culture, a large agricultural and gas sector, and a growing IT and services economy. Cost of living: BOB 6,000-9,000/month ($870-1,300) for a comfortable expat lifestyle. Santa Cruz has good international schools, shopping centres, private hospitals, and direct flights to Miami, Madrid, and most South American capitals. The expat community is significant, particularly from Brazil, Argentina, and increasingly the US and Europe.
Bolivia is less commonly chosen by digital nomads due to geographical isolation, limited visa options for long stays, altitude challenges in La Paz, and slower internet speeds compared to neighbours like Colombia or Argentina. However, Santa Cruz is increasingly practical: affordable ($700-900/month on a budget), reliable internet in modern areas, warm climate, and straightforward 90-day tourist visa. Bolivia does not have a formal digital nomad visa. Most nationalities receive 30-90 days on arrival. For longer stays, extensions or border hops are common but lack a formal framework. The 13% RC-IVA (effectively lower after deductions and VAT offsets) is competitive for those who do establish residency.
Bolivia's corporate income tax is the IUE (Impuesto sobre las Utilidades de las Empresas) at 25% on net annual profits. This is relatively high compared to the personal income tax burden. An additional complementary tax applies in some industries. For entrepreneurs considering Bolivia as a business base, the personal tax burden is low (13% RC-IVA, effectively lower with deductions) but corporate profits are taxed at 25%. Businesses in Bolivia's free trade zones or special economic areas may benefit from reduced rates. The extractive industries (natural gas, mining) are subject to additional taxes and royalties. Bolivia's mining and gas sector offers significant business opportunities despite the higher corporate tax rate.
Last Updated: April 2026