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child support in kenya

Child Support in Kenya 2026: How to Get, Calculate and Enforce Maintenance (mediation‑first)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 hours ago

Navigating child support in Kenya has changed significantly since the Judiciary issued its April 17, 2026 directive strengthening court‑annexed mediation as a mandatory first step in most family disputes, including maintenance claims. For separated parents, guardians and family lawyers, this means the pathway from initial demand to enforceable maintenance order now runs through a structured mediation phase before a court application can proceed. This guide covers every stage of that pathway, from the legal basis under the Children Act 2022 to the practical mechanics of applying for a maintenance order, calculating a fair amount, converting mediation agreements into enforceable consent orders and pursuing enforcement both within Kenya and across borders.

What Is Child Maintenance Under Kenyan Law?

Child maintenance, also called child support, is the legal obligation of a parent or guardian to contribute financially to the upkeep of a child. Under Kenyan law, this obligation applies regardless of whether the parents were married. It covers basic needs such as food, shelter, clothing, education and medical care, but courts also consider the child’s established standard of living and any special requirements.

Legal Basis: The Children Act 2022

The statutory foundation for child maintenance in Kenya is the Children Act 2022. The Act imposes a duty on every parent to maintain their child and sets out the court’s power to make maintenance orders. It empowers the Children’s Court and Magistrate’s Courts to hear applications, determine liability and specify the amount, frequency and duration of payments.

Who Is Liable, and Who Can Apply?

Both parents share the duty to maintain their child. The obligation is not limited to the father; a mother earning a higher income may equally be ordered to contribute. Liability extends to legal guardians and, in certain circumstances, step‑parents who have assumed parental responsibility.

The following persons may apply for a maintenance order:

  • A custodial parent. The parent with day‑to‑day care of the child is the most common applicant.
  • A guardian or relative. A grandparent, aunt, uncle or any person who has assumed parental responsibility for the child may file an application.
  • A children’s officer. The State Department for Children Services may intervene where a child’s welfare is at risk.
  • The child directly. An older child may, in exceptional circumstances, make an application through a next friend or guardian ad litem.

In short: yes, you can sue the child’s father, or mother, for child support in Kenya. The right to apply is not limited by marital status, and it can be exercised by anyone who has assumed responsibility for the child’s care.

Mediation First, What the Judiciary’s April 17, 2026 Directive Means for Child Support in Kenya

The Judiciary’s April 17, 2026 directive, building on the Civil Procedure (Court‑Annexed Mediation) Rules 2022, now requires parties in eligible family disputes, including maintenance claims, to attend mediation before a court hearing is listed. The Judiciary’s court‑annexed mediation framework aims to reduce case backlogs and encourage faster, less adversarial resolution of mediation in family disputes in Kenya.

Summary of the Directive and Court‑Annexed Mediation Rules

Under the directive, when a maintenance application is filed, the court registry screens the case for mediation eligibility. If the case qualifies, the registrar refers the parties to a panel of accredited mediators. The mediation session must take place within a specified time frame, typically within 60 days of referral. If the parties reach an agreement, the mediator files a report and the agreement can be adopted as a consent order by the court, making it immediately enforceable.

When Mediation Is Mandatory vs When You Can Bypass It

Mediation is the default pathway, but there are clear exceptions. The court may allow a party to bypass mediation in the following circumstances:

  • Domestic violence or abuse. Where there is a history or current threat of violence, the court may fast‑track the case directly to a hearing to protect the applicant and child.
  • Urgency. If the child is in immediate need, for example, requires emergency medical treatment or is at risk of being removed from the jurisdiction, the court may grant interim orders without requiring mediation first.
  • Non‑attendance. If the respondent fails to attend mediation after proper notice, the mediator certifies non‑attendance and the case proceeds to court.
  • Safety concerns. Where there is a significant power imbalance or credible evidence that mediation would endanger the applicant, the court exercises discretion to waive the requirement.

Practical Steps: Booking a Mediation Session

To initiate mediation, the applicant files the maintenance application at the court registry, which triggers the screening process. In practice, the process involves selecting or being assigned an accredited mediator from the Judiciary’s panel, agreeing on a venue (usually the court‑annexed mediation centre) and attending with all relevant financial documents. Mediation fees are typically shared equally and are significantly lower than full litigation costs. Most sessions are concluded within one to three sittings over a two‑ to six‑week period.

Step‑by‑Step: How to Apply for a Maintenance Order in Kenya

If mediation fails or is exempted, the next step is to apply for a maintenance order through the Magistrate’s Court or Children’s Court. Below is a structured walkthrough to help you prepare and file your application efficiently.

Pre‑Filing: Evidence Checklist

Thorough preparation is the single most important factor in securing a fair maintenance order. Before visiting the court registry, gather the following documents:

Document Why It Matters Where to Get It
Child’s birth certificate Proves parentage and the child’s age Civil Registration Department
Applicant’s national ID or passport Verifies identity and standing to apply Personal records
Respondent’s identification details Required for service of court documents Personal records; investigator if unknown
School fees receipts and invoices Quantifies education expenses School administration
Medical bills and insurance records Shows healthcare costs for the child Hospital, clinic or insurer
Rent receipts or tenancy agreement Demonstrates housing costs attributable to the child Landlord or agent
Respondent’s income evidence (pay slips, business records, bank statements) Helps the court assess the payer’s capacity Subpoena through court if not voluntarily provided
Monthly budget for the child Summarises total child‑related expenditure Prepared by applicant

Filing Forms, Fees and Court Registry Steps

To apply for a maintenance order, follow these steps:

  1. Visit the nearest Magistrate’s Court or Children’s Court registry with your evidence bundle.
  2. Complete the maintenance application form (available at the registry). State the amount of maintenance you are seeking and attach your supporting documents.
  3. Pay the filing fee. Court fees for maintenance applications are modest, typically in the range of KES 500–2,000 depending on the court station.
  4. The registry assigns a case number and a date for mediation screening or, where mediation is exempted, a hearing date.
  5. Serve the respondent with a copy of the application and the court summons through a process server or court bailiff.

The timeline from filing to first hearing varies by court station. In Nairobi, expect four to twelve weeks for the initial hearing. County courts outside the capital may be faster.

What to Expect at the Hearing

At the hearing, both parties present their financial evidence. The court may require the respondent to disclose income through sworn affidavits. If the parties reach an agreement during or before the hearing, the court records it as a consent order, which carries the same enforcement power as a contested judgment. Where no agreement is reached, the magistrate makes a determination based on the evidence and issues a maintenance order specifying the monthly amount, payment method and duration.

How Child Support Is Calculated in Kenya: Methodology and Worked Examples

There is no fixed formula for maintenance calculation in Kenya. Courts exercise broad discretion, guided by the principle that both parents should contribute proportionally to the child’s needs relative to their respective means.

Factors Courts Consider

When determining the appropriate amount, a court typically weighs the following factors:

  • The child’s actual needs. Food, housing, clothing, school fees, transport, medical costs and recreational expenses.
  • The child’s standard of living. Courts aim to preserve the lifestyle the child enjoyed before the parents’ separation, where feasible.
  • The payer’s income and financial capacity. Gross income, deductions, other dependants and reasonable personal expenses.
  • The custodial parent’s contribution. Both financial contributions and the economic value of caregiving time.
  • Number of children. Orders scale with the number of children requiring support.
  • Special needs. Any disability, chronic illness or extraordinary educational requirement increases the maintenance figure.

Worked Examples

Scenario Inputs Suggested Monthly Order
A, Lower‑income payer Payer earns KES 40,000/month; one child; custodial parent earns KES 25,000/month; child’s total monthly needs estimated at KES 18,000 (school KES 5,000; food KES 5,000; housing contribution KES 4,000; medical KES 2,000; other KES 2,000) KES 11,000 (payer’s proportional share based on income ratio ≈ 61%)
B, Higher‑income payer Payer earns KES 350,000/month; two children; custodial parent earns KES 80,000/month; children’s combined monthly needs estimated at KES 120,000 (private school KES 50,000; housing KES 30,000; food KES 15,000; medical/insurance KES 10,000; transport KES 8,000; other KES 7,000) KES 98,000 (payer’s proportional share based on income ratio ≈ 81%)

These examples illustrate the proportional approach courts typically follow. The actual order may differ based on judicial discretion, the quality of evidence presented and any special circumstances. Industry observers expect courts to increasingly scrutinise undisclosed income, particularly from self‑employed respondents, following the Judiciary’s emphasis on financial transparency in family matters.

Mediation Outcomes: Turning Agreements into Enforceable Orders

A successful mediation session produces a written agreement signed by both parties and the mediator. However, a mediation agreement is not automatically enforceable as a court order. To give it the force of law, the agreement must be converted into a consent order.

How to Register a Mediation Agreement as a Consent Order

Under the Civil Procedure (Court‑Annexed Mediation) Rules 2022, the mediator files the signed agreement with the court. The parties, or their lawyers, then present the agreement to the presiding magistrate, who reviews it to ensure it is fair, particularly regarding the child’s welfare. If satisfied, the magistrate adopts the agreement and enters it as a consent order. This process typically takes one to two weeks after the mediation concludes.

To strengthen enforceability, ensure the mediation agreement includes a clause such as:

“The parties agree that this mediation agreement shall be submitted to the [Court Name] for adoption as a consent order under the Civil Procedure (Court‑Annexed Mediation) Rules 2022, and shall thereupon be enforceable as an order of the court.”

Enforcing Child Support in Kenya: Domestic Remedies

Obtaining a maintenance order is only half the battle. Many applicants face the challenge of a payer who stops paying or pays inconsistently. Kenyan law provides several remedies to enforce child support domestically.

Post‑Order Enforcement Options

  • Contempt of court proceedings. A payer who wilfully disobeys a maintenance order may be cited for contempt. The court may impose a fine or, in serious cases, a custodial sentence.
  • Garnishee (attachment of earnings) orders. The court can direct the payer’s employer or bank to deduct the maintenance amount directly from wages or accounts and remit it to the applicant.
  • Seizure and sale of assets. Where the payer has identifiable assets, property, vehicles or other valuables, the court may order attachment and sale to recover arrears.
  • Variation applications. If the payer’s financial circumstances have genuinely changed, either party may apply to vary the order. However, the court will scrutinise claims of reduced income carefully to prevent abuse.
  • Committal to civil jail. As a last resort, persistent non‑payment may result in committal, though courts prefer less drastic remedies first.

Tactical Steps: Demand Letter, Sheriff Instructions and Asset Searches

Before initiating formal enforcement proceedings, practitioners typically follow an escalation sequence that begins with a formal demand letter. A well‑drafted demand letter puts the payer on notice, sets a payment deadline (usually 14 days) and warns of legal consequences. If the demand is ignored, the applicant’s lawyer instructs the court bailiff or sheriff to execute the order through attachment of earnings or assets.

Conducting an asset search early, even before enforcement is needed, is a practical safeguard. Searches at the Lands Registry, the Companies Registry and the National Transport and Safety Authority (NTSA) for vehicle ownership can reveal assets available for attachment.

If the payer stops paying, immediate steps:

  1. Document the missed payments with dates and amounts owed.
  2. Send a formal demand letter via registered post or email (retain proof of delivery).
  3. File a contempt or garnishee application at the court that issued the original order.
  4. Instruct your lawyer to conduct an asset search (lands, companies, vehicles).
  5. If the payer has left the jurisdiction, begin cross‑border enforcement procedures immediately.

Cross‑Border Child Support: Enforcing a Kenyan Maintenance Order Overseas

When the paying parent relocates outside Kenya, enforcement becomes more complex but remains achievable. Cross‑border child support from Kenya requires strategic planning and, almost always, the involvement of local counsel in the foreign jurisdiction.

Jurisdiction, Registration Abroad and Reciprocal Enforcement

The first step is to determine whether the foreign jurisdiction has a reciprocal enforcement arrangement with Kenya. Some Commonwealth countries recognise and enforce Kenyan maintenance orders through their domestic registration procedures. Where no reciprocal arrangement exists, the applicant must apply to the foreign court for recognition and enforcement of the Kenyan order, which may require proving that the order was made by a court of competent jurisdiction, that the respondent was properly served and that the order remains valid and unsatisfied.

Letters rogatory, formal requests from the Kenyan court to the foreign court, may be used to compel disclosure of the payer’s foreign assets or income. Forum selection is important: where possible, practitioners advise securing an order in both jurisdictions to maximise enforcement options.

Practical Tactics: Tracing, Debt Enforcement and Immigration Triggers

Tracing a payer who has moved abroad may require engaging commercial tracing agents or private investigators in the destination country. Social media activity, employer records and immigration data can assist in locating the individual. In some jurisdictions, significant unpaid maintenance arrears can trigger immigration consequences, including refusal to renew a passport or travel document, although this remedy is jurisdiction‑dependent. Engaging local counsel early is critical, as procedural requirements vary significantly between countries.

Sample Templates and Downloads

The following templates are designed to support parents and practitioners in preparing maintenance claims efficiently.

  • Demand letter for child support. A formal letter addressed to the non‑paying parent, setting out the maintenance obligation, the arrears owed, a 14‑day payment deadline and the consequences of non‑compliance (contempt proceedings, garnishee orders). Customise the template with specific figures and dates before sending via registered post.
  • Mediation preparation checklist. A one‑page document listing all financial records, evidence of the child’s needs, identification documents and any correspondence with the other parent that should be brought to the mediation session.
  • Court evidence checklist. A comprehensive list of documents to file with the maintenance application (see the evidence table above), formatted for use as a cover page when assembling the court bundle.

Timeline and Cost Estimate for Child Support in Kenya

Step Expected Timeframe Typical Cost
Request mediation and attend first session 2–6 weeks KES 5,000–20,000 (shared between parties)
File maintenance application (if mediation fails) 4–12 weeks (including registry processing) KES 500–2,000 filing fee + lawyer’s fees
Court hearing and maintenance order 1–6 months (depending on court docket) Lawyer’s fees (varies); no additional court fee in most cases
Enforce order (garnishee/attachment) 2–12 weeks after judgment KES 2,000–10,000 execution fees + lawyer’s fees
Cross‑border enforcement 3–12+ months Variable, depends on foreign jurisdiction; budget for local counsel fees

When to Get a Lawyer, Practical Guidance

While it is possible to file a maintenance application without legal representation, engaging a family lawyer is strongly recommended in the following situations: the respondent is likely to contest the application, there are cross‑border elements, enforcement is anticipated or the case involves complex financial disclosure. When selecting a lawyer, consider asking:

  • How many maintenance cases have you handled in this court station?
  • Do you have experience with enforcement, including garnishee orders?
  • Have you dealt with cross‑border maintenance enforcement?
  • What is your fee structure, fixed fee, hourly or contingency?
  • Can you assist with asset tracing if the payer attempts to hide income?

Bring your evidence bundle (see the checklist above), any previous correspondence with the other parent and the child’s birth certificate to your first consultation.

Conclusion

Securing child support in Kenya in 2026 requires navigating a mediation‑first process that, while adding a preliminary step, can lead to faster and less adversarial outcomes for both parents and children. Where mediation fails or is inappropriate, the court system provides clear procedures for obtaining and enforcing maintenance orders, including cross‑border mechanisms when a paying parent moves abroad. Parents and guardians considering a maintenance claim should gather their evidence early, understand the mediation pathway introduced by the Judiciary’s April 2026 directive and seek qualified legal advice where the case involves complexity, contested finances or enforcement challenges.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Veronica Kimiti at Kimiti & Associates Advocates LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. The Judiciary, Court Annexed Mediation
  2. Civil Procedure (Court‑Annexed Mediation) Rules 2022, Kenya Law
  3. Children Act 2022, Kenya Law
  4. State Department for Children Services, Community Child Support
  5. Bond Advocates LLP, An Easy Guide to Co‑parenting in Kenya
  6. MMS Advocates, Child Support When One Parent Moves Abroad
  7. Koya Advocates, FAQs on Child Support in Kenya
  8. Manwa OH Advocates, Role of Mediation in Family Disputes
  9. F.M Muteti & Company Advocates, Child Custody and Maintenance in Kenya

FAQs

Can I sue my baby daddy for child support in Kenya?
Yes. Any parent, guardian or person with parental responsibility can apply for a maintenance order under the Children Act 2022, regardless of whether the parents were married. If mediation is required under the Judiciary’s directive, you must attend mediation before the court will list the case for hearing.
In most cases, yes. The Judiciary’s April 17, 2026 directive and the Civil Procedure (Court‑Annexed Mediation) Rules 2022 require mediation as a first step. Exceptions apply where there is domestic violence, urgency, safety concerns or where the respondent fails to attend.
Courts assess the child’s actual needs, each parent’s income, the number of dependants and any special requirements. There is no statutory formula, the court exercises discretion based on proportionality and the child’s best interests. See the worked examples above for typical calculations.
Yes, but it requires registering the Kenyan order in the foreign jurisdiction or applying for recognition through that country’s courts. Reciprocal enforcement arrangements with some Commonwealth countries can simplify the process. Engaging local counsel in the destination country is essential.
Remedies include contempt of court proceedings, garnishee (attachment of earnings) orders, seizure and sale of assets and, as a last resort, committal to civil jail. Follow the five‑step enforcement checklist outlined in this guide.
If mediation succeeds and a consent order is entered, payments can begin within weeks. Contested court proceedings take longer, typically three to six months from filing to order. Garnishee orders attached to an employer’s payroll can produce payments within one to two pay cycles after the order is served.
Courts have discretion to backdate maintenance to the date the application was filed, and in some cases to an earlier date where the payer has deliberately avoided responsibility. The applicant must provide evidence of the period and the expenses incurred.
Yes. Either party may apply to vary a maintenance order if there has been a material change in circumstances, such as a significant increase or decrease in income, additional children, a change in the child’s needs or a change in custody arrangements. The court will reassess the order based on current evidence.
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Child Support in Kenya 2026: How to Get, Calculate and Enforce Maintenance (mediation‑first)

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