Dried fruit is light, nutritious, and shelf‑stable—exactly what shoppers and export buyers want. Meanwhile, up to 40 % of Zambia’s fresh fruit perishes each season for lack of cold storage. Bridging that gap is a profitable, impact‑driven opportunity. This guide walks you step‑by‑step through launching a fruit drying and packaging business in Zambia, from market research to the first shipment of product.

1. Size the Opportunity

Rising supply, rising losses

Mango, pineapple, citrus, and wild fruits already exceed 118 000 t annually, and volumes are inching upward. Yet informal markets lose a large share to bruising and spoilage. Turning surplus into dried slices or powders converts waste into value while cutting farmer losses.

Why dried beats fresh on export

Landfreight to South African ports makes fresh fruit pricey versus South African growers. Dried fruit, however, is compact, light, and tariff‑friendly, giving Zambian processors a level playing field for regional (Botswana, Namibia, South Africa) and EU markets. Organic‑certified baobab powder and chewy mango strips already leave Lusaka for European buyers—proof the model works.

2. Formalise Your Company

| Step | Action | Benefit | | 1 | Name search & reservation (PACRA) | Locks in brand | | 2 | Draft Articles & Memorandum of Association | Defines ownership & objectives | | 3 | File at PACRA and receive certificate | Legal personality | | 4 | ZRA TPIN + VAT registration | Enables compliant trading | | 5 | Apply for local business licence & food‑processing permit | Satisfies councils & ZCSA |

Tip: early registration makes you eligible for export rebates, bank finance, and the 10 % farming‑income tax rate.

3. Choose the Right Drying Technology

| Scale | Technology | Pros | Cons | | Micro | Screened solar dryer | Almost free energy | Weather‑dependent, slower | | Small/Medium | Cabinet or tunnel hot‑air dryer (electric or LPG) | Simple, proven, 50–250 kg/batch | Moderate energy cost | | Medium | Heat‑pump or infrared dryer | 30–40 % energy savings, better colour | Higher capex | | Premium | Vacuum or freeze dryer | Retains flavour & nutrients, premium price | High capex, skilled staff |

Whichever system you pick, target final water activity ≤ 0.60 to stop microbial growth, then cool, condition in sealed drums or jars for a week, and test for condensation.

4. Lay Out an Efficient Plant

  • Receiving / Sorting – inspect, weigh, and log fruit.

  • Wash & Sanitise – food‑grade detergent plus 50 ppm chlorine rinse.

  • Prep – peel, core, slice to uniform 6–8 mm.

  • Drying Room – positive‑pressure, filtered air to keep dust out.

  • Cooling & Conditioning – stainless tables, insect screens.

  • Packaging Zone – temperature‑controlled, hand‑wash basins.

  • Finished‑Goods Store – 20 °C, 50 % RH, pallet racks.

  • Lab Corner – test moisture, water activity, and label compliance.

Good flow minimises cross‑contamination and labour time.

5. Crack the Packaging Puzzle

Problem: supermarket buyers reject local packs that leak oil, lose seals, or miss barcode data.

Solution stack

  • Material – multilayer PET/Al foil/LLDPE stand‑up pouches with oxygen absorber.

  • Source – import through regional converters or bundle orders via local aggregators (e.g., Kobu Foods & Packaging) to hit MOQ discounts.

  • Label – English, ingredient list, net weight, ‘Best Before’, TPIN, batch code.

  • Seal & test – pouch burst test to ≥ 200 kPa; run 10‑day shelf trial at 40 °C.

Meeting chain‑store standards unlocks higher‑margin urban consumers.

6. Secure Fruit Supply

| Model | How it works | Benefit | | Direct procurement | Pay farmers on delivery at factory gate | Lower cost, quality oversight | | Out‑grower schemes | Provide seedlings + agronomy, sign purchase contracts | Guaranteed volume, loyalty | | Wild-harvest networks | Train rural collectors, pay per kg | Sustainable baobab, tamarind inputs |

Always pay fair, fast, and transparent—word travels quickly in producer communities.

7. Count the Money

Up‑front investment

  • Equipment: ZMW 750 000–3 000 000 (US$30 k–120 k) depending on capacity.

  • Building & utilities: ZMW 600 000+ for 300 m² shell, three‑phase power, potable borehole.

  • Vehicle: 5‑ton refrigerated truck, ZMW 900 000.

Operating costs (per month at 1 t finished product)

  • Raw fruit: ZMW 220 000

  • Labour (14 staff): ZMW 90 000

  • Energy & water: ZMW 55 000

  • Packaging & labels: ZMW 65 000

  • QA, compliance, marketing: ZMW 25 000

  • Total: ≈ ZMW 455 000

Financing routes

  • Development bank agro‑processing loans (9–12 % p.a.).

  • Impact investors targeting climate‑smart food.

  • Equipment vendor credit.

  • Small initial batch dryer financed by personal savings; scale later from cashflow.

8. Use Tax Incentives to Boost Cash Flow

| Incentive | Detail | Impact | | Income tax 10 % | For farming and processing | +9 % net margin vs standard rate | | 100 % capital allowance | Plant & machinery | Write off capex year 1 | | Dividend holiday (5 yrs) | Profits from farming | Attracts equity finance | | Zero‑rated VAT on exports | Claim input VAT | Improves working capital | | VAT deferment on import equipment | No cash outlay at border | Preserves start‑up cash |

File correctly with ZRA to capture every kwacha.

9. Land Your Product in the Market

Domestic channels

  • Supermarkets: Shoprite, Pick n Pay—high volumes, strict specs.

  • Health stores & cafés: premium pricing, story‑driven branding.

  • Institutions: schools, mines, airlines—contracts smooth cashflow.

  • Tourism lodges: souvenir packs positioned as ‘Taste of Zambia’.

Export playbook

  • Region first: consolidate 1‑2 t mixed loads to Botswana or Namibia.

  • Certifications: HACCP and Organic boost EU access; find buyer via commodity trading platforms.

  • Freight: dried fruit fits 20 ft container under temp‑controlled liner or airfreight for niche orders.

  • Trade shows: attend Africa’s Big 7 or Biofach (Germany) to meet bulk buyers.

10. Stay Compliant and Safe

  • Register product with ZCSA; pass periodic factory audits.

  • Follow Food Safety Act 2019 and Codex drying standards.

  • Keep batch records for recall traceability (you’re unlikely to need them, but buyers will ask).

Conclusion

Launching a fruit drying and packaging business in Zambia converts harvest gluts into high‑value exports, boosts farmer incomes, and taps growing consumer demand for healthy snacks. The recipe for success is clear: formalise early, invest in the right dryer, nail packaging, build loyal farmer links, and leverage tax breaks. Execute on those pillars and your dried mango, pineapple, or baobab powder could soon sit on shelves from Lusaka to Luxembourg.