Kenya’s rental property market is entering a new era of regulatory scrutiny. The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has accelerated its drive to bring every residential landlord onto the electronic Rental Income Tax System (eRITS), while the Draft Income Tax (Residential Rental Income Tax) Regulations, 2026 propose mandatory landlord registration in Kenya for anyone earning income from residential letting. Media reports indicate the authority is targeting up to KSh 80 billion in previously untaxed rental income, making this one of the most significant property tax reforms Kenya has pursued in recent years. For landlords, developers, property managers and foreign investors, the compliance window is narrowing, and the cost of inaction is rising sharply.
Before reading further, here are three steps every property owner should take immediately:
The short answer is that KRA is treating registration as operationally mandatory, even while the Draft Income Tax (Residential Rental Income Tax) Regulations, 2026 await formal gazettement. KRA’s public notice on the onboarding of rental properties onto eRITS directs all landlords to register their properties through the system, accessible via the KRA portal and eCitizen. The notice does not frame registration as optional, it instructs landlords to provide property and ownership details as a precondition for rental income tax compliance.
Under existing law, any person earning rental income in Kenya is already required to declare that income and pay tax under the Income Tax Act. What the 2026 proposals add is a structured, property-level registration regime that allows KRA to match specific buildings, units and landlords to rental receipts. Industry observers expect this data infrastructure to dramatically increase enforcement capacity, because KRA will be able to cross-reference eRITS records against land registry data, county government valuation rolls and tenant-reported payments.
The practical effect for property owners is clear: even if the Draft Regulations have not yet been signed into law at the time of reading, the eRITS onboarding process is live and KRA is actively requesting compliance. Landlords who delay registration risk being flagged for audit once the system’s data-matching capabilities come fully online.
The eRITS onboarding notice and the broader regulatory proposals cast a wide net. The following categories of property owners and operators are expected to register:
Based on the KRA eRITS onboarding notice, landlords should prepare the following documentation bundle before beginning the registration process:
For developers and lenders, additional documentation may include construction permits, escrow account details and off-plan sale agreements. Preparing these records in advance significantly reduces the risk of errors during the eRITS onboarding process.
Kenya’s rental tax Kenya framework has operated under a simplified regime since 2016, allowing qualifying landlords to pay a flat percentage on gross rental income rather than computing net income after deductions. The Draft Income Tax (Residential Rental Income Tax) Regulations, 2026 propose to tighten and formalise this system, with several changes that directly affect how landlords calculate and file their obligations.
Under the current simplified regime, landlords with annual residential rental income not exceeding KSh 15 million pay tax at a rate of 7.5 percent on gross rent received. This rate applies in lieu of the graduated individual income tax rates, and landlords opting into the simplified regime cannot claim expense deductions against the rental income. The draft proposals retain this simplified structure but introduce monthly filing as standard, replacing the option of annual returns, and strengthen KRA’s ability to verify declarations through eRITS data.
For landlords whose rental income exceeds KSh 15 million annually, or who choose not to use the simplified regime, rental income is taxed under the normal Income Tax Act provisions: net rental income (gross rent minus allowable expenses such as mortgage interest, repairs, management fees and land rates) is added to the landlord’s total income and taxed at graduated rates up to 30 percent for individuals or at the corporate rate for companies.
The following examples illustrate the practical tax impact for different landlord profiles:
| Scenario | Monthly gross rent | Annual gross rent | Tax regime | Annual tax payable | Net yield note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A, Resident individual, one property | KSh 80,000 | KSh 960,000 | Simplified (7.5%) | KSh 72,000 | No expense deductions; effective rate 7.5% on gross |
| B, Non-resident landlord | KSh 150,000 | KSh 1,800,000 | Withholding tax (30%) on gross | KSh 540,000 | WHT deducted at source; DTA relief may reduce rate |
| C, Resident corporate developer (5 units) | KSh 500,000 total | KSh 6,000,000 | Simplified (7.5%) or normal corporate | KSh 450,000 (simplified) or lower if expenses deducted under normal regime | Choice depends on expense profile; professional advice recommended |
These figures demonstrate that for most resident landlords with moderate portfolios, the simplified regime offers certainty and lower compliance costs. However, landlords with significant allowable expenses, particularly mortgage interest on recently financed properties, may achieve a lower effective rate under the normal regime. The rental income tax 2026 proposals do not change the available rates, but monthly filing and eRITS verification make under-declaration significantly riskier.
Non-resident landlords in Kenya face a default withholding tax rate of 30 percent on gross rental income. This is deducted at source, typically by the tenant or the property manager, and remitted directly to KRA. The non-resident landlord’s registration on eRITS is essential because, without it, the non-resident cannot file returns, claim refunds or apply for reduced withholding rates under an applicable double taxation agreement (DTA).
Kenya has DTAs with several countries, including the United Kingdom, India, South Africa, Germany and France. Where a DTA provides for a lower withholding rate on rental income (often classified as “income from immovable property”), the non-resident must apply to KRA for a tax exemption certificate and provide evidence of tax residency in the treaty partner state. Industry observers expect the eRITS registration requirement to become a procedural gateway for DTA relief: without a registered property and an appointed local representative, KRA is unlikely to process relief applications.
Non-resident landlords should also be aware that Kenyan rental income must be reported in the landlord’s home jurisdiction. Proper documentation of Kenyan taxes paid, including eRITS filings and withholding tax certificates, is essential for claiming foreign tax credits abroad.
The eRITS platform is KRA’s dedicated system for administering residential rental income tax. According to the KRA public notice on the onboarding of rental properties, the system is accessible through the standard KRA online services portal and integrates with eCitizen for identity verification. The following is the general registration and filing workflow:
Several common mistakes can delay or complicate landlord registration on the KRA landlord portal. Title deed details (particularly land reference numbers) must match exactly what appears on the registered title, discrepancies between the title and county records are a frequent source of rejection. Joint ownership must be declared properly: where two or more persons own a property, each owner should be registered and the income-sharing ratio clearly stated. Property managers should ensure their management authority letter is current and signed, as expired or unsigned documents will be flagged. Finally, tenants are not liable for the landlord’s registration, it is the landlord’s responsibility to register the property and declare income, even when a tenant pays rent directly to a management agent.
The consequences of ignoring landlord registration penalties are substantial and likely to increase as KRA’s enforcement infrastructure matures. Under the existing Income Tax Act, failure to file a return attracts a penalty of 5 percent of the tax due or KSh 20,000, whichever is higher. Late payment of tax incurs interest at a rate of 2 percent per month on the unpaid amount. Where KRA determines that a landlord has wilfully evaded tax, criminal prosecution is possible under the Tax Procedures Act, carrying potential fines and imprisonment.
The enforcement architecture behind eRITS is designed to close the compliance gap through data matching. As reported by Business Daily Africa, KRA intends to cross-reference eRITS records against data from the Lands Registry, county government valuation rolls, electricity and water utility connections, and bank transaction records. This multi-source approach means that unregistered landlords are increasingly likely to be identified, even without a formal investigation, through automated discrepancy alerts.
For landlords who have not previously declared rental income, voluntary disclosure before a KRA audit commences is strongly advisable. Kenya’s tax law provides for reduced penalties where a taxpayer self-reports before being contacted by KRA. Engaging a qualified tax adviser to prepare a voluntary disclosure application can substantially reduce exposure to back-taxes, penalties and interest.
The mandatory landlord registration drive does not exist in isolation. It intersects with Kenya’s evolving regulatory framework for property developers, including requirements around escrow accounts for off-plan sales and developer licensing under various county government regulations. Developers who hold completed but unsold residential units and earn rental income from them will need to register each unit on eRITS, a significant administrative undertaking for large-scale developments.
Lenders financing residential developments should also take note. Where a borrower is earning rental income from a financed property, lenders may need to verify that the borrower’s eRITS registration is current as part of ongoing covenant compliance. Failure to register could indicate broader tax non-compliance, which creates credit risk for the lender.
The following action points are recommended for developers and lenders engaging with these property tax reforms Kenya:
For a more detailed overview of business registration and compliance obligations in Kenya, including the Business Registration Service’s mandate and practical realities, property developers may find that earlier guidance useful alongside the new rental-tax requirements.
| Entity type | Registration obligation (eRITS) | Filing frequency & special notes |
|---|---|---|
| Resident individual landlord | Register property and landlord details (KRA PIN, title, tenancy schedule) | Monthly filing under draft regulations; allowable deductions available only under normal regime |
| Resident corporate landlord (Ltd / LLP) | Register company and all properties; include KRA PIN and CR12 | Monthly filing; corporate income tax treatment applies if normal regime elected; expense allocations must be documented |
| Non-resident landlord | Must appoint local representative or agent; register both agent and property | Withholding tax deducted at source; registration essential for WHT certificates and DTA relief claims |
| Developer (unsold/temporarily let units) | Register each income-generating unit; provide development portfolio details and escrow references | Special reporting where off-plan sale income overlaps with rental income; escrow reconciliation required |
| Short-term / holiday rental operator | Register each rental listing and operator details | Additional county licensing rules may apply; platform-reported income increasingly shared with KRA |
Landlord compliance in Kenya demands immediate, structured action. The following checklist prioritises the most urgent steps:
The convergence of KRA’s eRITS onboarding drive, the Draft Income Tax (Residential Rental Income Tax) Regulations, 2026 and enhanced data-matching enforcement creates an environment where voluntary non-compliance is no longer a viable strategy. Whether you are a resident individual with a single rental unit, a non-resident investor managing a Nairobi portfolio from abroad, or a developer bridging the gap between construction completion and unit sales, landlord registration in Kenya is now a baseline operational requirement. Early indications suggest that KRA’s enforcement capacity will continue to strengthen throughout 2026 and beyond, making proactive registration significantly less costly than reactive compliance after an audit.
For a deeper understanding of how Kenya’s residential rental income rules apply to your situation, or to arrange a portfolio compliance review, consult a qualified Kenyan real estate lawyer without delay.
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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