Swahili holds official status in four core countries, with broader recognition across the East African Community (EAC).
Fully Official Countries
| Country | Status Details |
|---|---|
| Tanzania | Sole national language since 1961; used in government, primary education, media. 95% fluency rate. |
| Kenya | National language (1964), official (2010); compulsory in all schools. Co-official with English. |
| Uganda | Official alongside English since 2022; mandatory in primary/secondary curricula. |
| Democratic Republic of Congo | One of four national languages (with French, Lingala, Kikongo); lingua franca in east. |
EAC Bloc Recognition
Swahili ranks as one of three official languages (with English, French) for the EAC, covering eight nations: Burundi, DRC, Kenya, Rwanda, Somalia, South Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda. This enables parliamentary use, trade standardization, and cross-border education, though implementation varies—Rwanda emphasizes Kinyarwanda primarily, Somalia uses it regionally.
Other Recognized Areas
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Rwanda/Burundi: National working language in EAC contexts; school subject.
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Mozambique: Official minority language in north (Mwani dialect).
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Comoros: Comorian dialect (Shingazija) nationally official.
Tanzania uniquely mandates Swahili exclusively for unity post-independence, unlike multilingual peers