The Kenya residential rental income rules 2026 are poised to reshape how every property owner in the country reports and pays tax on rent. On 22 March 2026, the Kenya Revenue Authority published the Draft Income Tax (Residential Rental Income Tax) Regulations, 2026, introducing mandatory landlord registration, monthly filing obligations and a simplified tax framework aimed at bringing Kenya’s largely informal rental sector into full compliance. A public consultation window, closing on 25 May 2026, gives landlords, developers and investors a narrow but critical opportunity to prepare, respond and adapt their operations before the rules are finalised.
This guide breaks down every material element of the draft, translates the legal language into actionable compliance steps and provides a 30/60/90-day plan designed to keep property portfolios on the right side of the new regime.
Before diving into the detail, here are the headline points every property stakeholder in Kenya should act on immediately:
Action: Read the full KRA public notice, download the draft regulations PDF and begin assembling your property data now.
The Draft Income Tax (Residential Rental Income Tax) Regulations, 2026 create a standalone compliance track for residential rental income in Kenya. The framework sits alongside, but is distinct from, the existing Monthly Rental Income (MRI) tax regime and the standard corporate or individual income tax return process. Understanding who the rules catch, what income qualifies and where the thresholds fall is the essential first step.
The draft regulations cast a wide net. The following categories of property owners are expected to fall within scope:
The simplified RRI regime targets landlords whose gross annual residential rental income falls within a defined band. Media reporting on the draft highlights an annual threshold of KSh 288,000 (equivalent to KSh 24,000 per month) as the entry point for the regime. Landlords earning below this threshold may continue to be assessed under the standard income tax provisions rather than the simplified RRI track.
| Income band | Tax treatment under draft RRI | Key note |
|---|---|---|
| Below KSh 288,000 p.a. | Standard income tax provisions apply | Landlord may still need to declare rental income in annual return |
| KSh 288,000 and above (within RRI ceiling) | Simplified RRI rate on gross rent | No deductions for expenses; flat-rate tax on gross receipts |
| Above the RRI ceiling | Standard corporate/individual rates | Full deductions available; must file under normal income tax regime |
The practical effect is that the RRI regime trades simplicity for the loss of expense deductions. Landlords within the band pay tax on gross rental receipts with no offset for mortgage interest, repairs or management fees. Landlords above the ceiling revert to full income tax treatment where deductions are available but compliance complexity is higher.
The most operationally significant element of the draft is the proposed requirement that all qualifying landlords register their properties on a KRA digital platform. Industry coverage refers to this as the electronic Rental Income Tax System, or eRITS. The registration obligation applies to every residential property generating rental income above the threshold, not merely to the landlord as a taxpayer.
This means a landlord with five rental units will need to register each property individually, providing KRA with a granular, property-level dataset it can cross-reference against tenant declarations, county government records and financial institution data.
While the final platform specifications will only be confirmed once the regulations are gazetted, the draft and supporting KRA public notice indicate that landlords should be ready to provide the following at the point of registration:
Landlords who do not currently maintain a formal rent roll, a common gap in Kenya’s residential rental market, should begin compiling one immediately. The consultation deadline for the draft regulations is 25 May 2026. Stakeholders wishing to comment on the registration process, data requirements or platform design should submit written representations to KRA before that date.
The shift to a monthly filing cycle represents the single largest operational change the KRA rental tax 2026 framework will impose. Under the existing MRI regime, residential landlords file and pay on a monthly basis, but compliance rates have been low and enforcement inconsistent. The draft RRI regulations seek to close that gap by tying registration, filing and payment into a single integrated digital workflow.
The key filing rule is straightforward: landlords must submit a return and pay the tax due on or before the 20th day of the month following the month in which rental income was received. Miss the deadline and both late-filing and late-payment penalties begin to accrue.
For landlords accustomed to annual self-assessment, this monthly cadence will require a fundamental change in bookkeeping discipline. Rent received in June must be declared and paid by 20 July. Rent received in July must be declared and paid by 20 August. There is no deferral to the end of the tax year.
Example 1, Individual landlord. A resident individual owns a three-bedroom apartment in Nairobi and charges KSh 35,000 per month in rent, yielding gross annual rental income of KSh 420,000. Because this exceeds the KSh 288,000 threshold, the landlord falls within the RRI regime. Tax is calculated on the gross monthly rent of KSh 35,000 at the applicable simplified rate. No deductions for property management fees, repairs or mortgage interest are permitted under the simplified track. The landlord files and pays via eRITS by the 20th of the following month.
Example 2, Corporate landlord. A Kenyan limited company owns a block of 20 studio apartments in Mombasa, each generating KSh 18,000 per month. Total gross monthly rental income is KSh 360,000 (KSh 4,320,000 annually). The company must register each unit on eRITS, file a monthly RRI return by the 20th, and reconcile the RRI filings with its annual corporate tax return. Because the aggregate income exceeds the RRI ceiling, the company may instead elect to be assessed under the standard corporate income tax regime, where deductions for allowable expenses are available. The choice of regime, simplified RRI versus standard, should be modelled carefully with a tax adviser before the first return is due.
| Entity type | Registration required? | Filing frequency and key notes |
|---|---|---|
| Individual (resident) landlords | Yes, register on eRITS | Monthly return; payment on or before the 20th of the month; threshold applies |
| Partnerships (registered) | Yes | Partnership files; partners may have secondary reporting obligations; income allocated per partnership agreement |
| Companies / corporate landlords | Yes | Additional RRI returns required alongside corporate tax filing; reconciliation between the two regimes advised |
| Non-resident landlords / agents | Likely via appointed agent or representative | Agents may be required to withhold and submit returns on behalf of non-residents, confirm in final regulations |
One of the most common questions from landlords reviewing the draft rental income tax Kenya 2026 framework is how it interacts with the existing Monthly Rental Income tax and capital gains tax regimes. The short answer is that the RRI regulations are intended to replace and streamline the MRI framework for qualifying landlords, but capital gains tax on disposal of property remains a separate obligation.
The existing MRI regime allows resident landlords with annual rental income not exceeding KSh 15 million to pay a simplified tax on gross rent. The draft RRI regulations appear to formalise and extend this approach while adding the mandatory registration and monthly platform-filing requirements that the MRI lacked in practice. Industry observers expect the final regulations to clarify whether landlords currently in the MRI regime will be migrated automatically to RRI or will need to re-register.
Capital gains tax (CGT) applies when a landlord disposes of property, whether by sale, transfer or assignment. The RRI regime does not affect CGT liability. Landlords planning to sell rental properties should model the combined tax cost: RRI on rental income received up to the point of sale, followed by CGT on any gain realised on disposal. Advance tax planning, including timing of disposals relative to RRI filing periods, can reduce cash-flow friction.
Developers converting existing buildings into sectional title units face a particular intersection of the Kenya residential rental income rules 2026 and the Sectional Properties Act framework. Where a developer retains unsold units and rents them pending sale, those units will fall within the RRI registration and filing requirements. Each sectionalized unit will need its own eRITS registration, tenancy documentation and monthly return. Developers should build RRI compliance costs into their project feasibility models and ensure that pre-sale agreements disclose rental tax obligations to buyers who intend to let their units.
Practical tax planning steps for all landlords under the draft regime include maintaining separate bank accounts for rental receipts, digitising tenancy records, updating lease agreements to reflect tax-related clauses and engaging a tax adviser to model the optimal regime (simplified RRI versus standard income tax) before the first filing date arrives.
The draft regulations do not create an entirely new penalty regime. Instead, they rely on the existing penalty provisions of the Income Tax Act and the Tax Procedures Act, which already prescribe sanctions for late filing, late payment and failure to register. What changes under RRI is the likelihood of detection.
By requiring property-level registration on eRITS, KRA will build a database that can be cross-referenced against tenant PAYE records, county land registries and bank transaction data. Early indications suggest that the most common audit triggers will include mismatches between the rent declared on eRITS and the amounts tenants report as housing benefit on their employment returns, as well as properties appearing in county records but absent from the eRITS register.
Landlords who have historically under-declared or failed to file rental income returns should consider making a voluntary disclosure before the new regime takes effect. The cost of voluntary rectification is almost always lower than the cost of a KRA-initiated audit, and early compliance can also mitigate the risk of interest accruing on unpaid taxes from prior periods.
The following checklist provides a structured timeline for landlords and developers preparing to comply with the draft residential rental income Kenya regulations. Treat each phase as a set of minimum actions, consult a qualified tax adviser for portfolio-specific guidance.
Property developer obligations Kenya under the draft RRI framework extend beyond simply paying tax on rental income. Developers who retain completed units for letting, whether as a deliberate hold strategy or while awaiting sales, will trigger RRI registration and filing obligations on each unit.
For developers undertaking apartment conversions under the Sectional Properties Act 2026, the compliance burden multiplies. Every sectional unit that generates rental income must be individually registered on eRITS, with its own title documentation and tenancy records. Developers managing phased handovers, where some units are sold while others remain in the developer’s rental pool, need to track which units fall under RRI and which have been transferred to buyers who then assume their own filing responsibilities.
Key developer actions include re-drafting unit sale agreements to disclose RRI obligations to purchasers, updating project budgets to account for monthly tax filing costs, liaising with conveyancers on the timing of sectional title transfers relative to RRI registration, and ensuring that marketing materials accurately represent the net rental yield after tax for units sold as investment properties.
The Kenya residential rental income rules 2026 represent a structural shift in how residential rental income is taxed, reported and enforced. The consultation window closes on 25 May 2026, and the likely practical effect will be a rapid move to finalisation and gazette notice in the second half of the year. Landlords, developers and investors who begin compliance preparation now, assembling documentation, registering on KRA platforms and modelling their tax position, will be materially better placed than those who wait for the final rules to be published. The cost of early action is low; the cost of late action, measured in penalties, interest and audit risk, is high and compounding.
| Date | Event | Source / Note |
|---|---|---|
| 22 March 2026 | Draft Income Tax (Residential Rental Income Tax) Regulations, 2026 published (PDF) | KRA draft PDF |
| 29 April 2026 | KRA public notice and amendments announced | KRA public notice; Kenyans.co.ke coverage |
| 25 May 2026 | Consultation deadline for stakeholder submissions | KRA social media post (consultation deadline) |
| TBD 2026 | Anticipated finalisation and gazette notice, monitor KRA and Treasury updates | Ongoing monitoring recommended |
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nigel Shaw at ENSafrica, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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