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Last reviewed: 8 May 2026
Land litigation in Kenya is entering a period of significant procedural change, driven by the National Land Commission (Amendment) tabled on the Parliament Order Paper of 26 February 2026 and a busy High Court docket of title-dispute and eviction cases. For general counsel, developers, landowners and tenants seeking litigation lawyers Kenya has long presented a complex jurisdictional landscape, split between the Environment and Land Court, the National Land Commission (NLC), county governments and various alternative dispute resolution channels. This guide maps the practical effects of the proposed amendment, walks through the title-deed challenge process step by step, sets out lawful eviction procedures and available defences, and provides realistic timelines from pre-litigation assessment through to enforcement.
Three immediate takeaways emerge for anyone with exposure to Kenyan land risk in 2026: monitor the NLC amendment’s progress through committee and readings; audit existing title documentation now, before any statutory reallocation of NLC powers takes effect; and secure interim relief early where possession or development rights are under threat.
The National Land Commission amendment appeared on the Parliament of Kenya Order Paper dated 26 February 2026, signalling that legislative activity on the NLC’s mandate, powers and dispute-resolution role is a live priority. The amendment addresses concerns that have accumulated since the NLC was established under Article 67 of the Constitution of Kenya 2010 and operationalised through the National Land Commission Act 2012. Industry observers expect the bill to recalibrate the boundary between the NLC’s administrative mandate and the adjudicatory jurisdiction of the Environment and Land Court, a boundary that has generated years of overlapping claims, conflicting orders and procedural uncertainty for litigants.
While the amendment’s final text will be shaped during committee stage and Parliamentary readings, the Order Paper listing and early stakeholder commentary indicate several areas of focus. The likely practical effect will be a clearer delineation of which land disputes must be channelled through the NLC’s administrative process before a party may file suit in the Environment and Land Court. Early indications suggest the amendment may also address the NLC’s powers to recommend revocation or rectification of irregularly issued titles, a function that has been contested in multiple High Court decisions where applicants argued the Commission overstepped into judicial territory.
Additionally, provisions relating to historical land injustices and community land claims are expected to receive updated procedural frameworks, potentially accelerating the resolution pipeline that has been criticised as slow and under-resourced.
| Date | Event | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 26 February 2026 | Parliament Order Paper lists the National Land Commission (Amendment) | Triggers stakeholder review and likely committee hearings, counsel should monitor and prepare submissions or representations. |
| 2026 (expected) | Parliamentary readings and committee stage | Potential change to NLC powers and dispute-resolution routes, could shift disputes from courts to administrative routes or vice versa. |
| Ongoing 2026 | High-profile land cases on the court docket | Strategic litigation opportunities and injunction windows, counsel must monitor Environment and Land Court calendars. |
Not every land dispute in Kenya requires full-blown litigation. The legal framework provides multiple pathways, administrative complaint to the NLC, mediation under court-annexed or private schemes, arbitration where contractual provisions exist, and formal suit in the Environment and Land Court or High Court. Choosing the wrong path wastes time and money; choosing the right one can secure possession, title or compensation months faster than the alternative. The decision framework below helps litigation lawyers Kenya practitioners and their clients apply when advising on route selection.
Title-deed disputes remain the single largest category of land litigation Kenya courts handle each year. The title deed dispute process under the Land Registration Act 2012 provides for rectification of the register where a title has been obtained through fraud, misrepresentation or other irregularity. The Environment and Land Court has original and unlimited jurisdiction over such claims, while the NLC may investigate and recommend action in cases involving historical injustices or irregular allocations of public land. Understanding the step-by-step process, and assembling the right evidence early, is critical to success.
Before filing suit, prudent practitioners carry out a title search at the relevant Land Registry to confirm the current registered proprietor, any encumbrances, caveats or cautions, and the parcel’s survey details. This search should be supplemented by a physical inspection of the land, comparison with the Registry Index Map, and, where available, a check of the NLC’s records for any pending complaint or historical injustice claim affecting the parcel. If the search reveals a competing title or an irregularity in the chain of ownership, a caveat (or caution) can be lodged under the Land Registration Act to prevent further dealings with the parcel while litigation is prepared.
This protective step is often overlooked but is essential: without a caveat, a fraudulent title-holder could transfer the parcel to a bona fide purchaser for value, potentially extinguishing the claimant’s remedy.
A suit challenging a title deed is filed in the Environment and Land Court by way of plaint (originating summons may be used for purely legal questions without disputed facts). The plaint must set out the claimant’s interest in the land, the nature of the irregularity alleged, the relief sought (rectification, cancellation, compensation or declaration) and the statutory basis for the claim. Standard court forms are available from the Judiciary of Kenya website and at the court registry. Filing fees are assessed based on the value of the subject property, and the court may require security for costs in certain circumstances.
Service of the plaint and summons on the defendant must comply with the Civil Procedure Act and the Environment and Land Court Act, including substituted service where the defendant cannot be traced.
Assembling the right documentary and expert evidence at the outset materially improves the prospects of success and reduces delay caused by adjournments for further evidence. The following table summarises the core documents litigation lawyers Kenya practitioners should compile before filing.
| Document | Purpose | Where to Obtain |
|---|---|---|
| Official title search certificate | Confirms current proprietor, encumbrances and caveats on the register | Relevant county Land Registry |
| Certified copy of the title deed (both parties’ versions if competing titles exist) | Establishes the specific instrument under challenge and allows comparison | Land Registry; party’s own records |
| Registry Index Map (RIM) extract | Confirms survey boundaries and parcel dimensions; identifies overlaps | Survey of Kenya or county survey office |
| Licensed surveyor’s report | Expert evidence on boundary demarcation, encroachment or overlap | Instructed licensed surveyor (Kenya Board of Registration of Architects and Quantity Surveyors list) |
| Chain-of-title documents (allotment letters, transfer instruments, succession grants) | Traces ownership history and identifies the point at which irregularity occurred | Land Registry historical records; family/estate records |
| NLC correspondence or investigation reports (if any) | Shows whether the NLC has investigated or made recommendations on the parcel | NLC offices or official website |
| Payment receipts (stamp duty, land rates, rent) | Corroborates genuine transaction or exposes lack of consideration | Kenya Revenue Authority; county government rates office |
| Witness statements / statutory declarations | Firsthand accounts of occupation, transaction circumstances or fraud | Prepared by instructed advocates; sworn before a Commissioner for Oaths |
| Valuation report | Quantifies the value of the disputed land for purposes of compensation or security for costs | Registered valuer |
This checklist is not exhaustive, complex cases involving community land, trust land or historical injustice claims may require additional anthropological, genealogical or archival evidence. Practitioners should tailor the evidence matrix to the specific grounds of challenge.
Eviction disputes generate some of the most urgent and socially sensitive work that litigation lawyers Kenya courts encounter. Whether the context is a commercial lease termination, informal settlement clearance for infrastructure development, or a residential tenancy dispute, the law imposes strict procedural requirements on any party seeking to remove an occupier. Failure to follow these requirements exposes the evictor to counterclaims, injunctions and, in extreme cases, criminal liability for forcible entry under the Penal Code.
The Land Act 2012, read together with the applicable lease terms and (for residential tenancies in rent-controlled premises) the Rent Restriction Act, establishes a layered notice regime. At a minimum, a landlord seeking to terminate a periodic tenancy must serve written notice of the duration prescribed by the tenancy type, typically one month for monthly tenancies. For fixed-term leases, the landlord must wait until expiry or establish a contractual ground for early termination (breach, non-payment, insolvency). Notice must be served in the manner specified by the lease or, failing that, in a manner reasonably calculated to bring it to the tenant’s attention.
Once notice has expired and the tenant has not vacated, the landlord must obtain a court order before executing the eviction. Self-help evictions, changing locks, disconnecting utilities, removing the tenant’s property, are unlawful and expose the landlord to tort and criminal liability.
Tenants and occupiers facing eviction proceedings have several lines of defence available, depending on the facts:
| Eviction Route | Typical Timeline (Notice to Execution) | Key Variables |
|---|---|---|
| Private landlord, commercial lease (uncontested) | 3–6 months | Notice period, court scheduling, tenant’s willingness to vacate after order |
| Private landlord, residential tenancy (contested) | 6–12 months | Constitutional proportionality arguments, adjournments, appeal risk |
| County government / infrastructure clearance | 6–18 months | Public interest balancing, resettlement obligations, political sensitivity, NLC involvement |
| Mortgagee repossession (statutory power of sale) | 4–9 months | Compliance with Land Act notice provisions, borrower’s right to redeem, surplus proceeds dispute |
Injunctions in Kenya are the primary tool for preserving the status quo while a land dispute is determined on its merits. The Environment and Land Court has broad power to grant temporary injunctions under Order 40 of the Civil Procedure Rules, and the principles governing the grant are well established: the applicant must demonstrate a prima facie case with a probability of success, that irreparable harm will be suffered if the injunction is not granted which cannot adequately be compensated by damages, and that the balance of convenience favours the grant. In cases of exceptional urgency, such as imminent demolition or forced eviction, the court may grant an ex parte injunction returnable within a short period, typically fourteen days.
Practical drafting tips for injunction applications include: stating the precise acts to be restrained (avoid vague or overbroad language that the court may refuse to enforce); attaching a supporting affidavit with contemporaneous evidence of the threat (photographs, correspondence, witness accounts); and offering an undertaking as to damages where required. A stay of execution, halting enforcement of an existing court order pending appeal, requires a separate application under Order 42 of the Civil Procedure Rules and is subject to its own threshold: the appeal must not be frivolous, and the applicant must show that substantial loss would result from refusal of the stay. Security for costs or a bank guarantee may be ordered as a condition.
Where the dispute arises from an administrative decision, an NLC recommendation to revoke a title, a county government’s refusal to approve a development application, or an irregular allocation of public land, the appropriate remedy is often judicial review land practitioners file under the Fair Administrative Action Act 2015 and Article 47 of the Constitution. Judicial review does not determine the merits of the underlying land claim; instead, it examines whether the decision-maker acted within its powers (legality), followed fair procedures (procedural propriety) and reached a decision that a reasonable body could have reached (rationality).
Applications for judicial review must be filed promptly, the Fair Administrative Action Act imposes strict timelines, and delay may result in the claim being barred. Remedies available include an order of certiorari (quashing the decision), mandamus (compelling the body to perform a duty), prohibition (preventing the body from acting), and declaratory relief.
Property dispute timelines in Kenya vary significantly depending on the complexity of the claim, the court’s caseload, and the conduct of the parties. The following table provides realistic estimates for the most common dispute types handled by litigation lawyers Kenya firms manage on behalf of institutional and individual clients.
| Dispute Path | Typical Timeline (Filing to Final Order) | Key Delay Risks |
|---|---|---|
| Title-deed challenge (Environment and Land Court) | 12–24 months | Survey evidence disputes, adjournments, multiple parties, NLC involvement |
| Eviction proceedings (contested) | 6–18 months | Constitutional arguments, stay applications, tenant appeals |
| Judicial review of NLC/county decision | 6–12 months | Government delay in filing responses, interlocutory applications, appeal |
| Appeal (Court of Appeal from Environment and Land Court) | 12–24 months (additional) | Record preparation, backlog, leave applications |
Costs are driven by filing fees (assessed on the value of the subject property), advocate instruction fees (typically structured as retainer plus hearing-day fees), expert witness fees (surveyors, valuers) and disbursements (searches, service, photocopying). For high-value commercial disputes, total costs from filing to a contested first-instance judgment commonly range from KES 500,000 to several million shillings, depending on complexity. Early settlement or mediation can reduce costs by 40–60 per cent, making it essential to evaluate ADR viability at the outset.
Choosing the right litigation counsel for a land dispute requires more than a directory search. General counsel and institutional clients should evaluate candidates against several criteria: demonstrated experience in the Environment and Land Court (not just general commercial litigation); familiarity with the NLC’s processes and the National Land Commission amendment currently before Parliament; access to reliable surveyors, valuers and forensic document examiners; capacity to handle urgent applications, including out-of-hours injunctions; and a transparent fee structure with regular cost reporting. Engagement letters should specify the scope of instructions, fee basis, authority levels for settlement, and arrangements for local counsel coordination where the instructing party is based outside Kenya.
A well-structured retainer and clear evidence-management protocol, including chain-of-custody procedures for original title documents, can make the difference between a streamlined case and one beset by avoidable procedural difficulties. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory provides a searchable listing of qualified litigation practitioners in Kenya, filtered by practice area and location.
Land litigation Kenya faces in 2026 is shaped by a convergence of legislative reform, an active court docket and long-standing structural disputes over title integrity and eviction rights. The National Land Commission amendment, once enacted, has the potential to reshape how disputes are allocated between administrative and judicial forums, making it essential for all parties with land exposure to prepare now rather than react later. Three immediate actions will position landowners, developers, tenants and general counsel for the year ahead. First, engage experienced litigation lawyers Kenya courts recognise for Environment and Land Court matters and instruct them to review your land portfolio for exposure.
Second, lodge protective caveats on any parcels where title integrity is uncertain and assemble the documentary evidence outlined in the checklist above. Third, monitor the amendment’s progress through Parliament and, where appropriate, make written submissions during committee-stage consultations. For practitioners seeking qualified counsel, the international litigation practice guide and the lawyer directory provide starting points for engagement.
This article provides general guidance on Kenyan land litigation and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult qualified Kenyan litigation counsel before taking action on any matter discussed above. Legislative developments, including the National Land Commission (Amendment) 2026, are subject to change during the Parliamentary process.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Christine Muthoga at Muthoga & Omari Advocates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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