Taxation and fiscal regimes play a direct and critical role in determining mine profitability [1]. They are a primary factor in a project’s financial viability, influencing everything from the initial decision to build a mine to its day-to-day operational strategy. A “fiscal regime” is the complete set of government policies (taxes, royalties, fees, and incentives) designed to capture a share of the value from a country’s mineral resources. This regime directly impacts a mine’s costs, cash flow, and overall risk profile.
Direct costs and cash flow
The most obvious role of taxation is as a direct cost that reduces a mine’s revenue and profit. The structure of these taxes is just as important as the rate.
Royalties: This is a payment to the government for the right to extract the mineral. Royalties are especially critical because they are often based on revenue, not profit.
- Ad valorem royalty: a percentage of the total value of the minerals sold (e.g., 5% of all gold sales). This must be paid even if the mine is not profitable (i.e., its operating costs are high). This poses a significant risk to miners, especially during periods of low commodity prices or high operating costs [2].
- Profit-based royalty: a percentage of the mine’s profit. This is less risky for the company, as they only pay if they are profitable.
Corporate income tax: this is the standard tax paid on a company’s net profits (Revenue minus Costs, Depreciation, Royalties, etc.). Because it’s profit-based, it’s a way for the government to share in the mine’s success without taxing it into unprofitability.
Other taxes and fees: these include withholding taxes (on dividends paid to foreign investors), value-added taxes (VAT) on supplies, import/export duties, property taxes, and licensing fees. Each of these adds a layer of cost that eats into the final profit margin.
Impact on investment decisions and viability
Mining is extremely capital-intensive, requiring billions of dollars upfront for a project that may only start generating revenue 5-10 years later and must last for 20+ years. The fiscal regime is a key variable in the financial models used to approve these investments.
- Financial modeling (NPV & IRR): companies use metrics like Net Present Value (NPV) and Internal Rate of Return (IRR) to determine if a project is worth the investment. The entire fiscal regime (all taxes and royalties) is a major negative value in these calculations. A high-tax regime can easily push a project’s forecasted IRR below the company’s minimum “hurdle rate,” meaning the mine will not be built.
- Tax incentives: conversely, governments use incentives to make projects more attractive [1]. The most important is accelerated depreciation, which allows a company to deduct its huge upfront capital costs from its taxable income more quickly. This improves cash flow in the crucial early years of the project, boosting its NPV and making it more likely to be approved.
Influence on operational strategy
The type of taxation in place can fundamentally change how a mine is operated. This is most evident with high, revenue-based royalties. If a mine must pay a 10% royalty on all ore it sells, it may be forced to engage in “high-grading [3].” This means the company will only mine the richest, highest-grade ore because the value of lower-grade ore is not high enough to cover the costs plus the royalty [3].
This practice is often inefficient, as it leads to the “sterilization” of the resource—the lower-grade ore is left in the ground and may be lost forever, reducing the total life of the mine and the total wealth recovered for both the company and the country [3].
Reference
[1] “Mineral Beneficiation South Africa: Value-Added Processing.” Accessed: Oct. 29, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://discoveryalert.com.au/news/minerals-beneficiation-south-africa-2025-economic-opportunities/
[2] “Mining Royalties: How They Impact Profitability and Investment Decisions,” Discovery Alert. Accessed: Oct. 29, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://discoveryalert.com.au/news/royalty-agreements-impact-mining-economics-2025/
[3] “Mining Royalties: How They Impact Profitability and Investment Decisions,” Discovery Alert. Accessed: Oct. 29, 2025. [Online]. Available: https://discoveryalert.com.au/news/royalty-agreements-impact-mining-economics-2025/


