Understanding how to buy property in Kenya as a foreigner is essential before committing capital to one of East Africa’s most active real‑estate markets. Kenya’s legal framework permits foreign buyers to acquire residential and commercial property, but the process is governed by specific statutes, principally the Land Act (No. 6 of 2012), the Land Registration Act (No. 3 of 2012) and the Stamp Duty Act (Cap. 480), that impose tenure restrictions, consent requirements and mandatory tax obligations on non‑citizens. Renewed urban momentum in 2026, combined with the ongoing digital migration of land registries to the Ardhisasa/eCitizen platform, means the conveyancing steps, timelines and costs that foreign buyers encounter today differ materially from those described in older guides.
This article sets out the full procedural pathway, from eligibility and due diligence through to registration and post‑completion, together with the documents needed for property transfer in Kenya, a realistic timeline, and an itemised costs table reflecting current fee bands.
Foreign nationals and foreign‑owned entities are legally entitled to purchase property in Kenya. However, the Constitution of Kenya (2010) restricts non‑citizens to leasehold tenure, typically granted for a maximum term of 99 years. Freehold ownership of land is reserved for Kenyan citizens. Where a foreigner already holds a freehold interest, the Land Act 2012 provides for its conversion to a 99‑year lease.
The restriction applies to individuals who are not Kenyan citizens and to companies in which the controlling interest is held by non‑citizens. In practice, foreign buyers Kenya most commonly acquire urban residential apartments, commercial office space, retail units and development plots on leasehold terms. Agricultural land is subject to additional restrictions and, in certain cases, requires Ministerial consent or approval from the National Land Commission.
The conveyancing process itself follows a standard sequence, property identification, due diligence, agreement, consents (if required), stamp duty payment, lodging of transfer instruments, and registration, supervised by the Ministry of Lands and Physical Planning and administered through the Lands Registry. The procedure is broadly the same for citizens and non‑citizens, but foreign buyers face additional steps relating to consent and the leasehold process in Kenya. Each step is explained in detail below, with the responsible party and typical duration set out in the timeline table.
Before entering into any transaction, foreign buyers must satisfy a number of requirements to buy property in Kenya. These apply whether the buyer is an individual, a foreign‑registered company, or a locally incorporated company with foreign shareholders.
Any non‑citizen with a valid passport may purchase leasehold property. There is no requirement to hold a Kenyan work permit or residence visa, although immigration status may be relevant for mortgage financing. The buyer must obtain a KRA PIN certificate from the Kenya Revenue Authority, this is mandatory for stamp duty payment and for lodging documents at the Lands Registry. KRA PINs are issued to foreigners via the iTax online portal.
A foreign‑owned company registered in Kenya may hold leasehold land in its own name. Some investors choose to incorporate a Kenyan limited company specifically for property acquisition, which can simplify ongoing compliance and succession planning. However, this route introduces additional regulatory obligations (Companies Act filings, beneficial ownership declarations) and does not override the leasehold restriction. An offshore entity that is not registered in Kenya will generally need to register a branch or subsidiary before acquiring property.
Agricultural land may only be acquired by non‑citizens with the consent of the relevant Cabinet Secretary under the Land Act 2012. In practice, this consent, sometimes referred to as the Alien Land Holding Licence, can take 14–60 days to process and is not guaranteed. Freehold interests cannot be granted to non‑citizens.
The following conveyancing steps represent the standard transaction pathway. Durations are typical ranges; actual timelines depend on the county, registry branch and whether consents are required.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1, Property identification & initial offer | Buyer / Licensed agent | 7–21 days |
| 2, Preliminary due diligence & title search | Buyer’s advocate / Buyer | 3–14 days |
| 3, Negotiation, heads of terms & sale agreement | Buyer / Seller / Advocates | 7–21 days |
| 4, Obtain required consents (if applicable) | Advocate / Ministry of Lands / NLC | 14–60 days |
| 5, Completion, stamp duty payment & lodging | Buyer / Advocate / KRA / Lands Registry | 7–30 days |
| 6, Registration & issue of new title | Lands Registry / Registrar | 7–60 days |
| 7, Post‑registration practical steps | Buyer | 3–14 days |
Engage a licensed estate agent registered with the Estate Agents Registration Board (EARB) to identify suitable properties. Request the seller’s title deed number, full name of the registered proprietor and a copy of the current title. Any reservation deposit should be paid into your advocate’s trust account or a formal escrow arrangement, never directly to the seller or agent at this stage. Confirm that the property is held on leasehold terms (or, if freehold, that conversion to a 99‑year lease will form part of the transaction).
Your advocate should conduct an official land title search via the Ardhisasa/eCitizen platform or directly at the relevant Lands Registry. The search confirms the registered proprietor, the tenure type, the remaining lease term, and any registered encumbrances, caveats or charges. In addition to the title search, instruct your advocate to verify:
This due diligence phase is critical. A clean title search does not by itself guarantee ownership, physical site inspection and independent verification of the seller’s identity are equally important. The Land Registration Act 2012 governs registration and the evidentiary weight of the register.
Once due diligence is satisfactory, your advocate drafts or reviews the sale agreement. This document should specify the purchase price, deposit amount (commonly 10% of the price, payable within 7–14 days of acceptance), conditions precedent (including any required consents), the completion date, and the obligations of each party. For foreign buyers, the agreement typically includes a condition that the transaction is subject to obtaining any necessary Alien Land Holding Licence or Ministerial consent. Both parties’ advocates negotiate the terms until a binding agreement is signed.
Depending on the property type and location, one or more consents may be required before the transfer can proceed. Under the Land Act 2012, a foreign national acquiring certain categories of land, particularly agricultural land, must obtain consent from the Cabinet Secretary responsible for land. Your advocate prepares and submits the consent application, which typically includes the signed sale agreement, proof of the buyer’s identity and KRA PIN, and a description of the intended use of the property. County‑level planning consents or National Land Commission approvals may also apply. Allow 14–60 days for processing; in complex cases, the timeline may extend further.
On completion, the balance of the purchase price is paid (usually through the buyer’s advocate’s trust account). Stamp duty Kenya obligations arise at this point: the buyer must pay stamp duty to the Kenya Revenue Authority before the transfer instruments can be lodged at the Lands Registry. Under the Stamp Duty Act (Cap. 480), the applicable rate is 2% of the property value for properties situated outside municipal boundaries and 4% for properties within municipalities and towns. The value used for assessment is the higher of the sale price or the government valuation.
Payment is made through the KRA’s iTax portal or, where available, via the Ardhisasa integrated payment workflow. Your advocate obtains the KRA stamp duty receipt, arranges execution of the transfer instrument (transfer form), and lodges the following at the Lands Registry:
The Registrar examines the lodged documents and, if satisfied, registers the transfer and issues an updated title document in the buyer’s name. Under the Land Registration Act 2012, registration confers on the new proprietor an indefeasible title, subject only to overriding interests noted in the Act. Processing times vary significantly: registries that have migrated to the Ardhisasa e‑lodgement system may complete registration in 7–14 working days, while other branches may take 30–60 days. Your advocate should monitor progress and follow up directly with the registry.
After registration, attend to the following:
The documents needed for property transfer in Kenya must be assembled before completion and lodging. Missing or defective documents are the single most common cause of registration delays. The table below lists each required document, its issuing authority and key notes.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Passport or national ID (buyer) | Issued by buyer’s home state. Certified copy required; original presented for verification at lodging. |
| KRA PIN certificate (buyer) | Issued by Kenya Revenue Authority via iTax. Mandatory for stamp duty payment and registry lodgement. |
| Current title deed | Held by seller or mortgagee. Verify title number and proprietor against the official land search. |
| Official land search / title report | Obtained via Ardhisasa/eCitizen or directly from the Lands Registry. Shows encumbrances, caveats and charges. |
| Sale agreement / transfer instrument | Prepared by advocate. Must be signed by both parties, stamped and lodged with the Registry. |
| Alien Land Holding Licence or Ministerial consent | Issued by the Ministry of Lands or Cabinet Secretary where required for foreign acquisitions under the Land Act 2012. |
| Rates clearance certificate | Issued by the relevant county government. Confirms no outstanding rates or land rent arrears. |
| Power of Attorney (if applicable) | Must be notarised and, where executed abroad, apostilled. Include proof of capacity and identity of the attorney. |
| Payment evidence | Bank transfer receipts or advocate trust account statements confirming deposit and completion payments. |
| Valuation report | Issued by a government valuer or approved valuer. Used for stamp duty assessment where the sale price differs from the government valuation. |
The overall transfer timeline for a straightforward transaction, where no unusual consents are required, is typically 60–90 days from initial offer to registration. Transactions involving agricultural land, Ministerial consents or registries that have not yet migrated to e‑lodgement may take longer. The critical time dependencies are set out below.
| Action | Deadline / Legal window |
|---|---|
| Deposit payment | As per sale agreement, commonly within 7–14 days of acceptance |
| Due diligence (title search) | Before signing sale agreement or within conditional period, commonly 7–14 days |
| Apply for consents | Immediately after signing heads of terms, allow 14–60 days for processing |
| Stamp duty payment | Must be paid before lodging transfer at Lands Registry |
| Lodge transfer | As soon as stamp duty receipt is available, typically within 7–30 days of completion |
| Registration completion | Variable, 7–60 days depending on registry branch and e‑lodgement status |
Two points merit particular attention. First, stamp duty must be paid before the transfer can be lodged, any delay in KRA processing directly extends the registration timeline. Second, where a sale agreement is conditional on consent, the completion date should build in sufficient time for the consent application to be determined (a minimum contingency of 60 days is prudent).
Foreign buyers should budget for the following costs in addition to the purchase price. The table below shows typical 2026 fee bands. All figures are indicative, confirm exact amounts with your advocate and the Kenya Revenue Authority before completion.
| Item | Typical amount (2026) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Stamp duty | 2% (outside municipalities) / 4% (within municipalities/towns) | Calculated on the higher of sale price or government valuation. Buyer pays. Payable via iTax before lodging. Stamp Duty Act (Cap. 480). |
| Advocate / conveyancing fees | 0.5%–2% of sale price (plus VAT) | Negotiable. Covers title searches, drafting, lodging and registration follow‑up. |
| Registration fees | Fixed nominal fees plus per‑page costs | Paid on lodging at the Lands Registry. Variable by branch. |
| Consents / licence fees | Varies (administrative fees) | Ministry or county fees for Alien Land Holding Licence or planning consents. |
| Survey / valuation costs | KES 20,000–150,000+ | Survey for boundary confirmation; valuation for stamp duty assessment. |
| Capital gains tax (seller obligation) | 15% on chargeable gains | Seller pays. Confirm current rate and exemptions with tax counsel. |
| Miscellaneous (searches, rates clearance) | Small fixed fees (varies) | Title search fees, county clearance letters, courier and certification costs. |
The buyer is responsible for stamp duty, advocate fees, registration fees and any valuation or survey costs. The seller bears the capital gains tax liability. VAT at the standard rate applies to advocate fees. Where the property is purchased through a Kenyan company, additional tax considerations, including corporate income tax on rental income and withholding tax on dividends, should be reviewed with specialist real estate or tax counsel.
Several developments in 2024–2026 have materially affected the leasehold process in Kenya for foreign buyers:
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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