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The landscape for conveyancing lawyers Kenya practitioners navigate in 2026 has shifted on two fronts simultaneously: the Sectional Properties Act is now fully operational, requiring developers to convert multi-unit developments into individually registrable sectional titles, while the Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026 has introduced material changes to the capital gains tax regime governing property transfers. Together, these reforms touch every stage of a conveyancing transaction, from the first sale agreement clause to the final registration of a charge. This guide provides developers, lenders, in-house counsel and conveyancing solicitors with the practical checklists, clause templates and step-by-step processes needed to transact with confidence under the new rules.
Specifically, this article delivers:
Two legislative instruments dominate the conveyancing reform agenda in Kenya for 2026. The Sectional Properties Act, enacted to replace the patchwork of long-lease and co-ownership arrangements previously used for apartments and mixed-use developments, has now reached full operational status following the publication of its commencement regulations. Separately, the Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026, introduced in the National Assembly and tracked through its committee stages via the Parliament of Kenya, adjusts capital gains tax provisions applicable to property disposals, widening the scope of reportable transactions and tightening the timing for CGT remittance.
| Key Change | Practical Impact | Immediate Action for Conveyancers |
|---|---|---|
| Sectional Properties Act fully operational, mandatory conversion for qualifying developments | Developers must register sectional plans and form management corporations; individual unit titles replace undivided share arrangements | Audit existing developments; prepare sectional plans; engage a registered surveyor and file at the Land Registry |
| Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026, revised CGT provisions for property transfers | Wider scope of disposals subject to CGT; updated remittance deadlines; potential purchaser reporting obligations | Update sale agreement CGT clauses; add withholding and gross-up provisions; confirm KRA filing timelines before completion |
| KRA enhanced guidance on stamp duty payment certificates | Stricter enforcement of stamp duty clearance before registration; tighter rejection of unstamped instruments | Obtain stamp duty assessment early; build stamp duty payment into transaction timelines; confirm clearance before submitting transfer documents |
| Interaction between Land Registration Act and Sectional Properties Act registration | Dual registration pathway: parent title remains at Land Registry while sectional plan and individual titles are registered separately | Run parallel searches on both the parent title and any existing sectional plan; confirm no unapplied-for conversions |
| Date / Period | Event | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Sectional Properties Act commencement date (as gazetted) | Act becomes fully operational; conversion obligations triggered for qualifying developments | Developers to begin sectional-plan preparation; conveyancers to update standard-form sale agreements |
| Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026, parliamentary passage and assent | Revised CGT provisions enacted; new remittance deadlines take effect | Conveyancers to revise CGT indemnity and withholding clauses; notify clients of new filing obligations |
| KRA compliance window for updated CGT returns | Transitional period for existing transactions to comply with new filing format | Submit any pending CGT returns under the updated format; confirm KRA iTax portal reflects new requirements |
| Ongoing | Land Registry accepting sectional-plan filings and issuing individual unit titles | Conveyancers to monitor registration timelines; lenders to confirm charge registration against individual unit titles |
Industry observers expect the combined effect of these changes to be a more transparent but procedurally demanding conveyancing process. Practitioners who update their templates and workflows promptly will be best positioned to avoid delays at the Land Registry and KRA.
Key takeaways for conveyancing lawyers Kenya practitioners:
CGT is calculated on the net gain, being the difference between the transfer value (sale price or market value, whichever is higher) and the adjusted cost of acquisition. Allowable deductions include the original purchase price, documented improvement costs, and legal fees incurred on both acquisition and disposal. The transferor is required to file a CGT return via the KRA iTax portal, pay the assessed tax, and obtain a CGT clearance certificate. Under the 2026 amendments, the practical effect is that conveyancers must build CGT payment into the pre-completion checklist, no transfer instrument should be lodged at the Land Registry without a valid CGT certificate.
Stamp duty under the Stamp Duty Act is the purchaser’s obligation. The rate is applied to the consideration stated in the transfer instrument (or the property’s market value as assessed by the government valuer, whichever is higher). The payment process requires the purchaser or their conveyancer to submit the transfer instrument for assessment, pay the assessed duty through the KRA e-Stamp system, and obtain a stamp duty payment certificate. Only stamped instruments are registrable at the Land Registry, an unstamped or under-stamped instrument will be rejected.
Consider a property purchased for KES 10 million, with KES 1.5 million in documented improvements, being sold for KES 18 million. The net gain is KES 6.5 million (18 million less 10 million less 1.5 million). CGT is calculated on this net gain at the applicable rate. The seller must file and pay this before completion. Separately, the purchaser pays stamp duty on KES 18 million (or the government valuation, if higher) at the prevailing rate for properties within a municipality. Both certificates must be in hand before the conveyancer lodges the transfer at the Land Registry.
Every sale agreement executed under the 2026 regime should include clauses addressing the following:
The Sectional Properties Act establishes a mandatory framework for converting qualifying multi-unit developments into individually registrable sectional titles. The Act applies to any building comprising two or more units capable of individual ownership, whether residential apartments, commercial office suites or mixed-use developments. This section provides conveyancing lawyers Kenya practitioners and developers with a detailed process map for Sectional Properties Act conversion.
| Stage | Responsible Party | Typical Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Engage registered surveyor; prepare sectional plan | Developer | 4–8 weeks |
| Obtain certificate of practical completion | Developer (via county government) | 2–6 weeks |
| Submit sectional plan for certification by Director of Surveys | Developer / Surveyor | 4–6 weeks |
| Lodge sectional plan and supporting documents at Land Registry | Developer / Conveyancer | 2–4 weeks for lodgement; registration timeline varies |
| Issuance of individual unit titles | Land Registrar | 4–12 weeks from lodgement (varies by registry) |
| Formation of management corporation; handover of common areas | Developer / Unit owners | Within 12 months of first unit sale (as prescribed) |
Common risks to flag: Existing mortgages encumbering the parent title can delay or block sectional-plan registration unless the mortgagee consents. Planning or land-use approvals that do not match the intended sectional layout will trigger rejections at the Surveys stage. Conveyancers should run preliminary title and planning searches well before the developer commissions the sectional plan.
Key takeaways for lenders and their counsel:
Where a charge is registered against an individual sectional unit, enforcement (whether by private sale, auction or receivership) proceeds against that unit only, the lender cannot enforce against the entire building or common areas. This changes the valuation calculus for lenders accustomed to holding charges over whole parcels. Security documents should define the “secured property” with precision, referencing the unit number, sectional plan number and parent title, and should include a covenant from the borrower to maintain the unit’s proportionate share of common-area obligations. Industry observers expect lenders to begin requiring enhanced valuations that separately assess the unit’s market value, the condition of common areas and the management corporation’s financial health.
The following clause templates are designed for adaptation to specific transactions. Each should be reviewed and tailored by qualified counsel before inclusion in any binding agreement.
The following conveyancing checklist Kenya practitioners should follow before registering any transfer or charge in 2026. It incorporates the additional steps required by the Sectional Properties Act and the revised CGT rules.
Red flags to watch for:
| Entity Type | Key Obligations | Typical Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Developer | Prepare and register sectional plan; form management corporation; disclose conversion status to purchasers; obtain completion certificates | 6–18 months from practical completion (depending on registry workload) |
| Seller | File CGT return; pay CGT; obtain CGT clearance certificate; provide title documents and all consents; discharge any existing encumbrances | 4–8 weeks before completion (CGT filing and clearance) |
| Purchaser | Pay stamp duty; obtain stamp duty payment certificate; conduct due diligence searches; execute and lodge transfer instrument | 2–6 weeks before completion (stamp duty); 2–4 weeks for registration lodgement |
| Obligation | Developer | Seller | Lender |
|---|---|---|---|
| CGT return filing (KRA iTax) | If disposing of units | Yes, mandatory before transfer | No direct obligation, but must verify as condition precedent |
| Stamp duty payment | If purchaser of land for development | No (purchaser’s obligation unless agreed otherwise) | No direct obligation, but must verify stamped instruments before registration of charge |
| Sectional-plan registration | Yes, primary obligation | No (unless selling a parcel intended for conversion) | No, but must consent if existing charge is registered on parent title |
| Land rates clearance | Yes, for parent title | Yes, for the property being transferred | Verify as condition precedent to disbursement |
| Topic | Before 2026 Rules | After 2026 Changes |
|---|---|---|
| Who pays CGT on sale | Seller liability under standard Income Tax Act provisions; less prescriptive remittance timeline | Seller liability confirmed with tightened remittance deadlines under the Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026; potential purchaser reporting obligations in defined circumstances |
| Title on enforcement | Whole-parcel enforcement, mortgage registered against land parcel title | Lenders must adapt security to cover individual sectional units; conversion-consent clauses are essential to protect priority |
| Registration steps | Standard transfer registration at Lands Registrar using a single title | Additional sectional-plan registration and management corporation formation under the Sectional Properties Act; dual-search requirement for conveyancers |
| Stamp duty process | Manual assessment common; some tolerance for delayed stamping | Stricter KRA e-Stamp enforcement; unstamped instruments consistently rejected at registration |
The 2026 reforms demand that every conveyancing lawyer in Kenya updates their standard-form agreements, due diligence workflows and client-advice letters without delay. Developers must prioritise sectional-plan preparation and management corporation formation. Lenders must insist on conversion-consent clauses and verify CGT and stamp duty compliance as non-negotiable conditions precedent. Purchasers and their counsel must build additional time into transaction timetables for the new registration and tax-clearance steps. The practitioners who adapt fastest, embedding new clauses, running dual-title searches and aligning with KRA’s updated processes, will deliver the most reliable outcomes for their clients. For tailored drafting, due diligence support and transaction advisory, consult a specialist through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article provides general guidance on conveyancing practice in Kenya as of May 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Practitioners and parties to transactions should obtain bespoke legal counsel tailored to their specific circumstances.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Safina Madhani at Mohamed Madhani & Company Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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