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The Finance Bill 2026 Kenya, published on 30 April 2026 and now before the National Assembly, proposes a wave of changes that will reshape how property transactions are taxed, reported and structured across the country. From mandatory KRA landlord portal registration and a new non-resident rental income tax to broadened capital gains tax on share transfers in property-owning companies, the Bill touches every link in the real estate value chain. For developers navigating VAT and withholding changes, conveyancers advising on completion packs, and landlords facing fresh filing obligations, this is the most consequential finance bill Kenya property stakeholders have encountered in years.
This practical guide translates each proposal into concrete compliance steps, sample clauses, and deadline-driven checklists so that you can act now rather than scramble later.
Last reviewed: 15 May 2026. This article reflects the Bill as tabled; it will be updated as the Bill progresses through Parliamentary committee stages and upon Royal Assent.
The Finance Bill 2026 introduces or amends provisions across the Income Tax Act, the Value Added Tax Act and related statutes. Below are the headline changes affecting property stakeholders, followed by five immediate actions.
If you do nothing: Landlords risk penalties for non-registration on the KRA portal; developers face denied input-VAT claims; and share-sale exits structured before commencement may still be caught by transitional provisions. The cost of inaction is material.
The Finance Bill 2026 was published by the National Treasury and tabled in the National Assembly on 30 April 2026. It is currently at the committee stage. Industry observers expect the Bill to receive Royal Assent by late June or early July 2026, with most provisions commencing on 1 January 2027 unless an earlier operative date is specified in the enacted Finance Act.
| Milestone | Date / Status | Practical Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Bill publication & First Reading | 30 April 2026 | Full text available; stakeholders should begin compliance gap analysis immediately. |
| Committee of the Whole House / Second Reading | May–June 2026 (anticipated) | Amendments may be introduced, monitor for changes to CGT scope and rental-tax thresholds. |
| Royal Assent & Gazette Notice | Late June–July 2026 (anticipated) | Enacted provisions become law; most property-related changes expected to commence 1 January 2027. |
Key point: Even though the provisions are not yet law, the window between now and commencement is your compliance preparation period. Waiting for Royal Assent before acting leaves insufficient time to restructure transactions, update systems and train staff.
The proposals affecting landlords are among the most operationally demanding in the Finance Bill 2026. They build on the existing residential rental income tax framework but introduce mandatory digital registration, broaden the tax net to non-resident property owners and tighten withholding at source. For background on the existing regime, see our earlier guide to Kenya residential rental income rules.
While detailed portal procedures will be confirmed by KRA upon enactment, landlords should prepare the following documentation now for KRA landlord registration in Kenya:
Under the proposed amendments, the withholding and filing workflow for rental income would operate as follows:
The likely practical effect will be that property managers become the critical compliance node for portfolios with non-resident owners, they bear the statutory withholding obligation and face penalties for non-compliance.
Landlords and their conveyancers should insert or update withholding-tax clauses in all new and renewed leases. A sample clause is provided in the drafting library below. The clause should address: (a) the tenant’s obligation to withhold at the prescribed rate; (b) the landlord’s right to receive rent stated as a gross amount; and (c) a gross-up mechanism ensuring the landlord receives the agreed net rent where withholding applies.
Note: All sample clauses in this article are indicative only and must be reviewed by qualified legal counsel before use.
Conveyancers sit at the intersection of every property-related change in the finance bill Kenya property landscape. The 2026 proposals require updates to due-diligence procedures, completion checklists and standard contract clauses.
Under current law, capital gains tax in Kenya is charged on the transfer of property situated in Kenya. The KRA’s published guidance confirms the applicable rate and calculation methodology. The Finance Bill 2026 proposes to broaden the CGT net by targeting disposals of shares in entities that derive their value principally from immovable property in Kenya, a measure aimed at investors who exit via share sales rather than direct asset transfers to minimise tax exposure.
Early indications suggest this amendment would apply where the majority of a company’s asset value, measured at the date of share disposal, comprises Kenyan real property. Conveyancers and corporate advisers should obtain up-to-date asset valuations before advising on any share-sale exit.
Consider a property-owning company whose sole asset is a commercial building in Nairobi valued at KES 100 million, acquired for KES 60 million. An investor holds 100% of the shares, acquired at KES 60 million.
| Transaction | Transfer value | Acquisition cost | Gain | CGT payable (at applicable rate) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct property sale | KES 100m | KES 60m | KES 40m | Calculated on KES 40m gain |
| Share sale (proposed) | KES 100m | KES 60m | KES 40m | Same CGT base, no arbitrage |
Under the proposed regime, the CGT outcome would be economically equivalent, removing the incentive to structure exits as share disposals solely for tax purposes.
Update your standard completion checklist to include:
Developers face a distinct cluster of proposals in the Finance Bill 2026 that affect both the cost of construction and the structuring of development finance. The amendments to VAT input-tax reclaim timelines, expanded withholding VAT on construction services, and tighter corporate loss-utilisation rules will compress margins unless proactive steps are taken now.
Banks and development-finance institutions providing construction loans should anticipate the following requirements under the proposed regime for property developer compliance Kenya:
Developers should review standard construction and sale contracts to include:
| Entity Type | Registration & Reporting Obligations (Proposed) | Immediate Compliance Action |
|---|---|---|
| Individual landlord (resident) | KRA landlord portal (ERITS) registration; monthly and annual rental tax filings; withholding where tenant is required to deduct | Register on ERITS, update lease clauses with withholding language, prepare rent accounting schedules, consult tax adviser |
| Non-resident landlord | Mandatory KRA registration; non-resident rental income tax; withholding at source by tenant or agent | Appoint a tax representative in Kenya, register for KRA PIN, appoint local filing agent, update bank mandates |
| Property-owning company / developer | Corporate filing changes; CGT on share transfers where entity derives value from Kenyan immovable property; VAT and withholding amendments on construction supplies | Review intra-group transfers and pending exits, insert tax indemnities in SPAs, audit VAT recovery processes, model loss-utilisation impact |
The proposed broadening of capital gains tax Kenya shares provisions is the single most significant change for investors and fund managers with Kenyan real-estate exposure. The Bill targets the disposal of interests in entities whose value is principally derived from Kenyan immovable property, capturing share sales, partnership interest transfers and similar dispositions that were previously structured to fall outside the CGT net.
Red flag: Industry observers expect KRA to scrutinise share transfers completed in the period between Bill publication and commencement. Transactions that appear designed to pre-empt the new provisions may attract challenge under existing anti-avoidance rules.
An investor acquired shares in a Kenyan property SPV for KES 50 million. The SPV owns land and a commercial building now valued at KES 120 million (representing 95% of the SPV’s total assets). The investor sells 100% of the shares for KES 120 million. Under the proposed provisions, the gain of KES 70 million would be subject to CGT. The investor should escrow the estimated CGT liability from the sale proceeds and file a CGT return within the prescribed window.
The Finance Bill 2026 proposes tighter deadlines and steeper penalties across rental income, CGT and corporate tax filings. The table below summarises the key compliance windows that property stakeholders should diarise.
| Obligation | Deadline (Proposed) | Penalty for Non-Compliance |
|---|---|---|
| KRA landlord portal registration | Before first rental payment is received (or within prescribed transition period upon commencement) | Fixed penalty plus daily default surcharge |
| Monthly withholding-tax remittance (rental) | By the 20th of the following month | Late-payment penalty plus interest on outstanding amount |
| Annual rental income tax return | By the statutory filing date (currently 30 June for individuals) | Late-filing penalty; risk of estimated assessment by KRA |
| CGT return on property/share disposal | Within the prescribed period following disposal (currently by the 20th of the month following transfer) | Penalty for late declaration; interest on unpaid CGT |
| Corporate income tax return (property companies) | Within six months of the end of the accounting period | Late-filing and late-payment penalties; potential director liability under proposed amendments |
In-house counsel action plan: Centralise all compliance deadlines in a single calendar; assign responsible officers for each filing; establish a 10-day early-warning trigger before each deadline; and retain evidence of all filings and payments for a minimum of seven years.
The following clauses are provided as starting points for conveyancers, landlords and developers. Each must be adapted to the specific transaction and reviewed by qualified legal counsel before execution.
Legal review required: These clauses are indicative drafts only. They do not constitute legal advice and must be tailored to each transaction by a qualified Kenyan advocate.
Whether you are a landlord, developer, conveyancer or lender, the finance bill Kenya property changes demand structured preparation. Use the timeline below to organise your response.
For personalised guidance on structuring property transactions, updating lease agreements or navigating CGT planning under the Finance Bill 2026, consider speaking with a qualified Kenyan corporate and conveyancing lawyer through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Guy Elms at Raffman Dhanji Elms & Virdee, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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