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Kenya’s 2026/27 fiscal year brings a convergence of legislative changes that every property developer, bank legal team and corporate counsel must account for before closing transactions. The Finance Bill 2026, the Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026 and the Business Laws Amendment Bill are collectively reshaping how property transfer tax is calculated, when stamp duty must be paid, and what security documentation lenders need to update. For corporate lawyers in Kenya, the window between now and the commonly cited 1 July 2026 commencement date is the critical period to audit existing deal templates, recalculate tax exposures and brief clients on the new compliance landscape.
This article provides a practitioner-level analysis of each legislative change, worked examples, annotated drafting guidance and a step-by-step compliance checklist designed for immediate use.
Three bills are driving the changes that corporate lawyers in Kenya need to track. Each is at a different stage of parliamentary consideration, and all three share a target implementation window aligned with the start of the 2026/27 fiscal year. The National Treasury’s Budget Policy Statement frames the policy objectives: broadening the tax base on property transactions, closing stamp duty avoidance gaps and modernising the business law framework that underpins secured lending.
The Finance Bill 2026 was published following parliamentary public hearings on the KSh 4.78 trillion 2026 budget. It contains proposals affecting stamp duty rates on certain instruments, introduces a mandatory monthly landlord tax portal and adjusts VAT refund procedures for developers. The Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026 targets capital gains tax provisions, specifically the timing of CGT liability crystallisation, valuation rules and withholding obligations on transfers by non-residents. The Business Laws Amendment Bill proposes changes to the Companies Act, the Insolvency Act and the Central Bank of Kenya Act that affect security registration, enforcement procedures and priority rules for lenders.
Industry observers expect that the Finance Bill and the Income Tax (Amendment) Bill will receive presidential assent in time for the 1 July 2026 fiscal year start, given the pace of committee debate recorded in the Hansard of 16 April 2026. The Business Laws Amendment Bill is further behind, with early indications suggesting a staggered commencement through subsidiary legislation. Counsel should treat 1 July 2026 as the primary planning date while monitoring the parliamentary calendar for the Business Laws Bill’s progress.
| Bill | Parliamentary Status (as at May 2026) | Immediate Action for Counsel |
|---|---|---|
| Finance Bill 2026 | Public hearings completed; committee stage underway; targeted assent before 30 June 2026 | Review stamp duty instruments and landlord withholding templates; update escrow provisions in sale agreements |
| Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026 | Second reading debated (Hansard, 16 April 2026); committee amendments expected | Recalculate CGT exposure on pending transfers; confirm valuation date methodology; draft withholding indemnities for non-resident vendors |
| Business Laws Amendment Bill | First reading complete; staggered commencement anticipated via subsidiary legislation | Audit existing security documents against proposed registration and priority changes; brief bank legal teams on enforcement workflow adjustments |
Given the pace of legislative activity, the practical advice for transactional teams is clear: structure all deals closing on or after 1 July 2026 on the assumption that the Finance Bill and Income Tax (Amendment) Bill provisions will be in force, and build contractual fallback language into agreements that straddle the commencement date of the Business Laws Amendment Bill.
Property transfer tax in Kenya is not a single levy but a combination of stamp duty under the Stamp Duty Act (Cap. 480), capital gains tax under the Income Tax Act (Cap. 470) and, for commercial and development transactions, VAT under the VAT Act 2013. Each tax has a different payer, a different trigger point and a different payment mechanism through the KRA’s iTax platform. The 2026 bills propose changes to all three, and corporate lawyers in Kenya must understand how these interact on a single transaction.
The table below summarises the core tax obligations by transaction type, including the party responsible for payment and the practical timing that conveyancers and lenders need to build into completion schedules.
| Transaction Type | Taxes Triggered (Stamp Duty / CGT / VAT) | Who Pays & Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Sale of freehold land (individual vendor) | Stamp duty on transfer instrument; CGT on gain | Purchaser bears stamp duty (payable before registration at Lands Registry); vendor bears CGT (payable via iTax before transfer is processed by KRA) |
| Sale of development units (developer/company vendor) | Stamp duty; CGT; VAT on commercial supply | Purchaser bears stamp duty; developer bears CGT and accounts for output VAT; VAT timing follows tax invoice rules |
| Transfer on enforcement of mortgage (lender sale) | Stamp duty on transfer; CGT attributable to borrower/chargor | Purchaser bears stamp duty; CGT liability falls on chargor but lender must manage withholding and KRA clearance before distributing proceeds |
| Lease (grant of new lease exceeding prescribed threshold) | Stamp duty on lease instrument | Typically borne by lessee; payable before registration |
Stamp duty in Kenya is charged on instruments, not transactions, meaning that the duty arises when a dutiable document is executed. The Stamp Duty Act prescribes different rates depending on the type of instrument and the location of the property. For conveyancers, the critical practical steps are ensuring that the parties have valid KRA PINs, that the instrument is presented for assessment through the iTax portal within the statutory window, and that the stamp duty receipt is obtained before lodging the transfer at the Lands Registry. An unstamped or improperly stamped instrument is inadmissible as evidence in Kenyan courts, which creates a real enforcement risk if stamp duty is overlooked on security documents.
The Finance Bill 2026 proposes adjustments to the duty treatment of certain instruments used in structured transactions, and industry observers expect the practical effect to be a modest increase in compliance burden for multi-party development deals where multiple instruments change hands at completion. Conveyancers should confirm the stampable instruments in every transaction file and obtain iTax payment receipts at the earliest opportunity.
Capital gains tax in Kenya is charged on the gain realised on the transfer of property. The Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026 proposes changes to how the gain is calculated, specifically the valuation date used for establishing base cost and the timing at which the liability crystallises. Under the proposed rules, the CGT liability point would be aligned more closely with the date of the sale agreement rather than the date of registration, which has significant implications for instalment sale contracts where completion may lag execution by months.
A worked example illustrates the exposure. Assume a Kenyan company acquired commercial land for KSh 50 million in 2019 and enters a sale agreement in August 2026 for KSh 120 million. The gain of KSh 70 million would attract CGT at the prevailing rate. Under the proposed timing rules, the obligation to compute and remit CGT would arise at the point of the sale agreement rather than at registration, compressing the vendor’s compliance window and requiring the vendor’s corporate lawyers to factor CGT payment into the pre-completion checklist rather than treating it as a post-completion administrative item.
Developers structuring instalment sales, particularly off-plan transactions, should note the risk: if the CGT liability crystallises at agreement stage, the vendor may face a CGT payment obligation before receiving the full purchase price. Sale agreements should include express provisions addressing CGT funding, purchaser cooperation with KRA clearance and escrow mechanics to protect the vendor’s cash flow position.
For real estate developer compliance, VAT is often the most complex layer of property transfer tax in Kenya. Developers registered for VAT must charge output VAT on the supply of commercial property (and certain residential units above prescribed thresholds), but the mechanics of input VAT recovery on construction costs, professional fees and unsold inventory create practical challenges that the Finance Bill 2026 is set to intensify.
The current KRA practice requires developers to account for output VAT on each unit sold while claiming input VAT credits on construction expenditure incurred across the entire project. Where units remain unsold, the developer carries forward input VAT that cannot be reclaimed until a corresponding output supply is made. The Finance Bill 2026 proposes changes to the VAT refund process, industry observers expect tighter documentation requirements and shorter filing windows that will require developers to maintain real-time VAT records rather than the batch-filing approach many currently use.
From a transactional drafting perspective, vendor agreements in development projects should include the following protections:
Corporate lawyers advising developers should also consider the interaction between VAT and stamp duty: the stamp duty base is the consideration stated in the instrument, which typically includes VAT. If VAT treatment changes mid-project due to the Finance Bill 2026, the stamp duty calculation on later units may differ from earlier phases of the same development, creating an inconsistency that must be managed in the completion accounts.
For bank legal teams, the 2026 legislative changes introduce three distinct areas of risk in bank security documentation: the stamp duty treatment of security instruments, the CGT consequences of enforcement sales and the procedural changes to security registration under the Business Laws Amendment Bill. Each requires targeted amendments to standard-form facility and security documents.
Stamp duty on security documents is a long-standing compliance point. Charges, debentures and mortgage instruments must be stamped to be enforceable. The Finance Bill 2026’s proposed adjustments to instrument classification may affect how certain structured security packages, particularly those involving floating charges over development assets, are assessed for duty. Lenders should request a stamp duty assessment on every security document at the point of execution and retain the KRA receipt in the security file. Failure to stamp a charge renders it inadmissible in court proceedings, which can be fatal to an enforcement action.
The CGT implications of enforcement sales are equally significant. When a lender exercises its power of sale under a mortgage and transfers the charged property to a third-party purchaser, the CGT liability technically falls on the chargor (the borrower). However, the lender controls the sale process and the distribution of proceeds. Under the proposed Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026 timing rules, the CGT liability may crystallise at the point the lender enters the sale agreement with the purchaser, not at the point of registration. This means the lender must calculate the estimated CGT, deduct it from the sale proceeds before distributing to the borrower, and remit it to KRA via iTax.
If the lender fails to do so and distributes the full proceeds, it may face exposure as an agent of the chargor under the withholding provisions.
The Business Laws Amendment Bill proposes changes to the registration framework for company charges at the Companies Registry, with the likely practical effect being a shorter registration window and enhanced requirements for particulars of the charge. Lenders should audit their registration workflows and ensure that the company secretarial team or external counsel files the charge within the statutory window, as late registration risks loss of priority.
The following illustrates the type of drafting that bank counsel should consider incorporating into facility and security documents for development finance transactions:
“The Borrower shall indemnify the Lender on demand against any liability, loss or cost that the Lender incurs as a consequence of any tax (including but not limited to stamp duty, capital gains tax and value added tax) arising in connection with the execution, registration, enforcement or release of any Security Document. Where any deduction or withholding is required by law to be made from any payment due under this Agreement, the Borrower shall pay such additional amount as is necessary to ensure that the Lender receives a net amount equal to the full amount that would have been received had no such deduction or withholding been required.”
This clause is intentionally broad. It covers stamp duty on the security instruments themselves, CGT that may arise on enforcement and any VAT that the lender may be required to account for if the transaction is structured as a taxable supply. The “on demand” formulation ensures the lender does not need to prove loss before calling for payment, and the gross-up provision protects the lender’s economic position if withholding obligations change after the facility is drawn.
The following step-by-step checklist is designed for transactional teams working on property deals that will complete on or after 1 July 2026. Each action item includes the recommended timing relative to completion.
| Entity Type | Tax and Reporting Obligations (Stamp Duty / CGT / VAT) | Immediate Action for Counsel |
|---|---|---|
| Kenyan company (vendor) | Stamp duty on transfer instrument; CGT payable by transferor on gain; output VAT for developers on commercial supplies | Confirm stamp duty calculation; compute CGT at agreement date; secure escrow for VAT refunds; request KRA receipts pre-completion |
| Non-resident vendor | CGT payable on Kenyan property gains; withholding obligations may apply to purchaser; KRA PIN registration required | Ensure vendor has KRA PIN; advise purchaser on withholding obligations; include comprehensive tax indemnity in the sale and purchase agreement |
| Landlord (rental income) | Finance Bill 2026 proposes a mandatory monthly filing and withholding portal for landlord tax in Kenya, with implementation targeted for FY 2026/27 | Register for the new KRA landlord portal; restructure accounting to support monthly filings; review tenant lease clauses for withholding cooperation |
| Bank / lender (enforcement) | Stamp duty on security instruments; CGT withholding responsibility on enforcement sales; charge registration at Companies Registry | Update standard-form security documents with tax indemnity and gross-up clauses; align enforcement sale workflow with KRA clearance timing |
The 2026 legislative cycle represents the most significant set of changes to Kenya’s property transaction and secured lending framework in recent years. For corporate lawyers in Kenya, the practical priority is clear: audit every pending deal for Finance Bill 2026 and Income Tax (Amendment) Bill 2026 exposure, update security document templates with robust tax indemnity and withholding provisions, and build KRA clearance timelines into completion schedules. Developers should restructure VAT accounting for real-time compliance, and lenders should treat the Business Laws Amendment Bill as a trigger for a full security documentation review as soon as its commencement date is confirmed.
The legislative window is narrow. Transactions closing on or after 1 July 2026 must be structured to account for the new rules, and transitional deals that straddle the commencement date carry the highest risk. Practitioners who act now, recalculating exposures, redrafting clauses and briefing clients, will protect their transactions and their clients’ commercial positions. To discuss how these changes affect a specific transaction or portfolio, find a qualified lawyer through the Global Law Experts 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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