Mauritius: The Strategic Gateway Powering South Africa’s Expansion Into Africa And Beyond


Mauritius Freeport Development (MFD) has intensified its engagement with South African manufacturers, positioning Mauritius as a strategic gateway for regional expansion into Africa, Asia and the Middle East.

As manufacturers navigate tightening margins, rising operational costs and intensifying global competition, expansion into high-growth markets presents significant opportunity. Structuring that expansion in a way that enhances competitiveness while protecting existing production bases requires a platform built for scale, efficiency and trade access. MFD is presenting Mauritius as that platform.

Located along major Indian Ocean trade routes, Mauritius offers direct connectivity between Africa, Asia, Europe and the Middle East, supported by political stability and regulatory certainty. Under the Freeport framework, companies operate within an export-focused fiscal environment that allows duty-free and VAT-free imports, full foreign ownership, no exchange controls and unrestricted repatriation of profits. Export-focused Freeport enterprises benefit from a preferential corporate tax structure, while incentives on capital goods and structured depreciation allowances further improve after-tax profitability. Products that meet origin requirements through value addition or substantial transformation in Mauritius qualify for preferential access under SADC and COMESA frameworks, enabling more competitive entry into regional markets.

“Mauritius gives South African manufacturers a structured way to access new markets without duplicating infrastructure or committing heavy upfront capital,” says Hans Herchenroder, Chief Commercial Officer at MFD. “It brings together trade access, operational readiness and cost efficiency within one coordinated platform.”

MFD operates under one umbrella brand as both Freeport infrastructure developer and fully integrated third-party logistics provider. The group develops and owns the industrial property and logistics infrastructure it operates from, managing more than 140,000m² of warehousing, industrial and office space adjacent to the Port Louis container terminal and the international airport. Facilities include large-scale ambient warehousing, internationally certified cold storage, industrial zones for value-added activities and a container park with substantial handling capacity, office space.

Because MFD owns the underlying property and delivers the logistics services within the same structure, manufacturers avoid layered margins typically associated with subcontracted warehousing, forwarding and transport models. Storage, customs clearance, freight forwarding, value addition and regional redistribution are coordinated within a single operational framework, strengthening cost management and providing one point of accountability across the supply chain. This structure strengthens cost control and improves margin performance while maintaining operational oversight.

The port infrastructure comprises 2.6 kilometres of deep-water quays equipped with modern gantry cranes and extensive container facilities, while the international airport connects Mauritius to major global business centres through daily international flights. This integrated sea-air capability supports consistent regional distribution and scalable export operations without requiring manufacturers to relocate their core production footprint.

“Companies that structure their supply chains strategically see direct impact on their bottom line,” Herchenroder adds. “Through MFD, manufacturers can expand their market reach, leverage preferential trade agreements and position themselves closer to growth markets while maintaining domestic production strength.”

International operators have already leveraged this model to strengthen their regional footprint. French sporting goods retailer Decathlon selected Mauritius as its regional distribution hub, establishing a 26 000 square metre warehouse facility to service African and Middle Eastern markets. Global packaging leader ALPLA operates from the Freeport, as does South African retailer Cape Union Mart for its East African distribution network. These investments demonstrate how global operators are structuring regional growth through Mauritius and MFD as a financially efficient base for expansion.

MFD will host a series of workshops in March for South African manufacturers and exporters. The sessions will include case studies, tax structure analysis, trade agreement frameworks and detailed logistics breakdowns to demonstrate practical pathways for regional expansion through Mauritius. The workshops form part of MFD’s broader engagement strategy aimed at supporting South African manufacturers seeking structured regional expansion.

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