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The Competition (Amendment) Bill 2026, published on the Kenya Parliament website in April 2026, represents the most significant overhaul of Kenyan competition law since the original Competition Act was enacted in 2010. For general counsel, CFOs and business owners, the immediate priority is clear: determine whether pending or planned transactions trigger the new suspensory pre‑merger notification regime, pause any notifiable deal completion until the Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) grants clearance, and audit existing contracts for clauses that could now attract enforcement action. This guide, written for commercial lawyers Kenya practitioners and the businesses they advise, maps each obligation, provides ready‑to‑use checklists and sample contract clauses, and sets out a practical compliance timeline.
Commercial law in Kenya encompasses the body of statute, regulation and common‑law principles governing business transactions, contracts, sales of goods, competition, consumer protection, and corporate dealings. It is distinct from pure corporate law (which centres on a company’s internal governance, shareholder rights and formation) in that commercial law focuses on the external trading relationships between enterprises and their customers, suppliers and competitors. Experienced commercial lawyers in Kenya routinely advise across both domains, but the 2026 legislative cycle has sharpened the focus squarely on competition compliance and transactional risk.
TL;DR, three actions for every Kenyan business leader right now:
The Competition (Amendment) Bill 2026 amends the Competition Act, 2010 across several pillars. According to the Parliament of Kenya PDF published in April 2026, Clause 13 of the Bill amends Section 89 of the Act to enhance clarity on penalties for failure to comply with lawful orders. More broadly, the Bill introduces a fully suspensory merger control regime, revises notification thresholds, increases filing fees, and strengthens the CAK’s investigative and enforcement toolkit.
Under the amended framework, the CAK’s enforcement toolkit includes administrative fines for gun‑jumping, the power to unwind completed transactions, director disqualification in serious cases, and criminal sanctions for obstruction of investigations. The practical effect, industry observers expect, will be faster and more aggressive enforcement than Kenya has historically seen, placing commercial compliance Kenya firmly at the top of board agendas.
Businesses operating under the Business Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, which runs in parallel with the Competition Bill, should also monitor cross‑practice compliance impacts in areas such as corporate procedure and tax, as several provisions interact with competition obligations.
The single most consequential change for deal‑makers is the move to a fully suspensory pre‑merger notification system. Under the prior regime, notifiable mergers had to be filed with the CAK within 30 days of the parties’ decision to merge, but completion could technically proceed before clearance. That is no longer the case.
A transaction is notifiable if it meets either of two tests: the combined turnover test (aggregate annual turnover of the merging parties exceeds the prescribed threshold) or the combined asset‑value test (aggregate value of assets held by the parties exceeds the prescribed threshold). Sector‑specific triggers apply to healthcare transactions and carbon‑based mineral deals, where lower thresholds have been introduced. The Kenya Competition Authority publishes updated threshold figures on its Mergers & Acquisitions guidance page.
The table below summarises reporting obligations by entity type under the new regime:
| Entity Type | Trigger for Notification | Filing Consequence / Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Public company (listed on NSE) | Combined turnover or market‑share thresholds; sector triggers for healthcare and minerals | Suspensory, must not implement until CAK clearance; initial CAK review followed by in‑depth review if concerns arise |
| Private acquirer (foreign or domestic) | Combined asset or turnover thresholds; control transfer | Same suspensory rules; filing documents include SPA, audited financials, market‑share data |
| Joint venture / asset purchase | Thresholds apply if control over assets or an undertaking is created or strengthened | Suspensory if control is created or strengthened; CAK may impose structural or behavioural remedies |
Once a notification is filed and until clearance is received, merging parties must observe a strict standstill. Early indications suggest that the CAK will scrutinise the following activities as potential gun‑jumping:
For a more detailed walkthrough of each step, see our companion guide on Kenya merger control changes 2026.
| Date | Event | Practical Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| April 2026 | Competition (Amendment) Bill 2026 published on Parliament of Kenya website | Legal teams to review amendments; map clauses to business operations; identify notifiable transactions in pipeline |
| Mid‑2026 (anticipated) | Expected commencement date following presidential assent and gazettal | Prepare suspensory notification process; draft CAK filing materials; amend SPAs with CAK clearance conditions precedent |
| Ongoing (2026) | CAK issues updated guidance notes, filing forms and fee schedules | Follow CAK filing process; confirm filing fees and timelines; update internal compliance manuals |
The Competition Bill 2026 does not only affect live M&A transactions. Any commercial contract that could raise superior‑bargaining, exclusivity or market‑sharing concerns now carries heightened risk. Commercial lawyers in Kenya should prioritise a contract‑by‑contract review of the following agreement types:
The following clauses are illustrative drafting templates. They must be adapted to the specific facts of each transaction and reviewed by qualified Kenyan counsel before use.
Clause 1, CAK Clearance Condition Precedent: “Completion of the Transaction shall be conditional upon the Competition Authority of Kenya issuing an unconditional approval, or an approval subject only to conditions acceptable to both Parties, pursuant to Part IV of the Competition Act (as amended). Neither Party shall take any step to implement the Transaction prior to receipt of such approval.”
Clause 2, Standstill / Pre‑Completion Conduct Covenant: “From the date of this Agreement until the earlier of (a) CAK Clearance or (b) termination of this Agreement, each Party shall conduct its business in the ordinary course consistent with past practice, shall not share competitively sensitive information beyond the scope of the agreed clean‑team protocol, and shall not take any action that would constitute implementation of the Transaction for the purposes of the Competition Act.”
Clause 3, Superior‑Bargaining Compliance Representation: “Each Party represents and warrants that the terms of this Agreement have been negotiated at arm’s length and that no term or condition has been imposed by virtue of a dominant or superior bargaining position within the meaning of the Competition Act (as amended). Each Party shall maintain records demonstrating the commercial justification for all material terms.”
Clause 4, Competition Risk Indemnity: “The Seller shall indemnify the Buyer against all losses, costs and liabilities arising from any enforcement action by the CAK in respect of any anti‑competitive conduct attributable to the Seller’s business prior to the Completion Date, including but not limited to fines, compliance costs and costs of any required divestiture.”
Clause 5, Long‑Stop Date with Regulatory Trigger: “If CAK Clearance has not been obtained by [Long‑Stop Date], either Party may terminate this Agreement by written notice, and neither Party shall have any further liability to the other save for obligations expressed to survive termination.”
Compliance is not a one‑time filing, it is an ongoing operational discipline. The likely practical effect of the 2026 amendments will be to make commercial compliance Kenya a standing board item for any business with turnover or assets approaching notification thresholds.
Industry observers expect that businesses maintaining a Merger Readiness Pack, containing pre‑populated CAK forms, recent audited financials, an organisational chart, and market‑share estimates, will shave weeks off the filing process and reduce the risk of incomplete filings being returned by the CAK.
Engage qualified commercial lawyers in Kenya at any of these practical thresholds:
The Competition (Amendment) Bill 2026 creates a narrow window of opportunity: businesses that prepare now, screening pipelines, assembling Merger Readiness Packs and auditing contract portfolios, will navigate the new regime efficiently. Those that delay face transaction hold‑ups, regulatory fines and avoidable commercial disruption. Whether you are a general counsel managing a portfolio of live deals, a CFO budgeting for filing fees, or a business owner entering a Kenyan market for the first time, the time to engage experienced commercial lawyers Kenya is before the commencement date arrives, not after.
This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult qualified Kenyan legal counsel for advice tailored to their specific circumstances. Last reviewed: 8 May 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Wangai Muhiu Maina at Mahida & Maina Company Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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