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Trade agreementUpdated October 15, 2025

AfCFTA (Africa) — free trade agreement in brief

African Continental Free Trade Area — the largest FTA by membership. Phased tariff reduction on 90 % of goods over 10 years.

African Continental Free Trade Area — the largest FTA by membership. Phased tariff reduction on 90 % of goods over 10 years.

Parties: 54 afrikanische Staaten. In force since: 2021 (schrittweise).

Parties
54 afrikanische Staaten
In force since
2021 (schrittweise)
Origin proof
AfCFTA CoO

01What it covers

African Continental Free Trade Area — the largest FTA by membership. Phased tariff reduction on 90 % of goods over 10 years.

Free trade agreements like this reduce tariff barriers and set common standards for non-tariff topics (standards, public procurement, investment protection). For exporters this translates into lower duties, faster clearance and more predictable compliance — provided the rules of origin are met.

02Key benefits

  • Intra-African market access for 1.3 bn people
  • Harmonisation of standards
  • Phased removal of non-tariff barriers

03Proof of origin and practice

AfCFTA certificate of origin, still rolling out across countries.

Note that rules of origin are defined product-specifically in the agreement's annexes — there is rarely a single percentage threshold. For complex goods with third-country inputs, document an origin calculation.

04Who benefits most?

The agreement pays off primarily for companies with recurring exports or imports between the parties and for products whose "normal" duty is ≥ 3–5 %. For electronic products already enjoying 0 % MFN duties, the benefit lies more in regulatory coherence than tariff elimination.

Frequently asked questions

When does a product qualify for preference?

Whenever it meets the product-specific rules of origin (e.g. wholly obtained, or sufficiently worked/processed). For third-country components, a value rule ("max. 40 % non-originating value") or a chapter-change rule typically applies.

Topics

AfCFTAAfrikaFreihandelKontinentalUrsprung

Further resources