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The perfection of securities in Kenya is undergoing its most significant overhaul in years, driven by the Finance Bill 2026 proposals and accompanying Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) circulars that together expand registrable security interests, tighten beneficial-ownership verification requirements, and impose new consumer-protection obligations on lenders. For in-house counsel, compliance teams and treasury managers at Kenyan banks, these changes demand immediate action, from updating loan-documentation templates to re-filing certain existing charges and embedding enhanced KYC workflows into the lending lifecycle. This practical compliance guide sets out the step-by-step actions banks must take to register and perfect security interests under the evolving framework, complete with checklists, model clauses and a remediation timeline designed for banking compliance in Kenya.
Banks should treat the Finance Bill 2026 proposals and the mid-2026 CBK circulars as requiring a coordinated compliance programme. The following six priorities should be initiated now, before final enactment dates are confirmed:
| Action | Owner | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Complete portfolio-wide security-interest audit and gap analysis | Legal & Compliance | Day 30 |
| Update loan-documentation templates (new clauses, BO representations, registration authorities) | Legal / Documentation team | Day 30 |
| Submit re-registration filings for high-priority charges | Legal / Registry liaison | Day 60 |
| Implement BO verification workflows in KYC systems; train relationship managers | Compliance / IT | Day 60 |
| Complete MIS enhancements and reporting dashboards; confirm all transitional filings | IT / Operations / Legal | Day 90 |
| Board or ALCO report on remediation status and residual risk | Chief Risk Officer / Company Secretary | Day 90 |
The Finance Bill 2026 proposals introduce several amendments directly relevant to the perfection of securities in Kenya. Industry observers expect the combined effect to be a broader universe of registrable interests, tighter timelines for filing, and heavier penalties for non-compliance. Below is a summary of the headline changes and their practical implications for banks.
The Bill proposes to expand the categories of security interests that must be registered to include certain intangible and future-asset classes previously treated as exempt. Specifically, interests over receivables arising from digital-platform revenues, intellectual-property licences and certain agricultural produce held in warehouse-receipt systems are expected to be brought within the registrable framework. Banks that have historically relied on contractual pledges or assignments of these asset types without formal registration will need to register such interests within the transitional period specified in the Bill.
Additionally, the Bill is anticipated to harmonise the registration requirements across the Companies Act register of charges, the Movable Property Security Rights (MPSR) Act registry and the Land Registration Act framework, reducing ambiguity about which registry applies to hybrid or multi-asset security packages.
The CBK circulars issued in mid-2026 complement the legislative changes by requiring banks to verify and record the beneficial ownership of every entity granting a security interest, prior to both execution and registration of the charge. These circulars also introduce enhanced consumer-protection disclosures for retail borrowers, including plain-language summaries of the security being taken and the consequences of default. Non-compliance with the circular requirements may result in supervisory action and could, in practice, delay or invalidate registration at certain registries.
| Date | Source | Required Bank Action |
|---|---|---|
| Finance Bill 2026 enactment date (to be confirmed upon Presidential assent) | Finance Bill 2026, Parliament of Kenya | Update loan templates and begin remediation plan within 30 days of enactment |
| Mid-2026 (CBK circular issue dates) | Central Bank of Kenya circulars | Implement BO verification procedures and report compliance to CBK |
| Transitional deadline (specified in the Bill’s transitional provisions) | Finance Bill 2026, transitional provisions | Re-register or confirm all affected charges before the deadline expires |
Perfection is the legal process by which a secured creditor’s interest is made enforceable against third parties and given priority over competing claims. It is distinct from the creation of the security interest (which arises by contract between lender and borrower) and from registration (which is one method of achieving perfection). A security interest that has been created but not perfected may be valid between the parties yet lose priority to a subsequently perfected interest held by another creditor.
In Kenya, the perfection method depends on whether the collateral is movable or immovable. Movable property, equipment, inventory, receivables, shares, is governed primarily by the Movable Property Security Rights Act and perfected through registration on the MPSR electronic registry maintained by the Business Registration Service (BRS). Immovable property, land, buildings, fixtures, is perfected through registration of a charge or mortgage at the relevant Land Registry under the Land Registration Act.
The MPSR registry is an electronic, notice-based filing system that provides public notice of a security interest in movable property. Registration is effected online, and the BRS MPSR Handbook sets out the required forms, search procedures and fee schedules. By contrast, the Land Registry operates a title-based system where the charge is endorsed on the title register, and the original certificate of title (or its electronic equivalent) is noted accordingly. Banks must ensure that the correct registry is used for each asset class, filing in the wrong registry does not perfect the interest.
This section is the operational core of the article. For each asset class, the steps below set out what banks must do to achieve valid perfection of securities in Kenya under the current and proposed frameworks.
| Asset Type | Perfection Method | Registry or Step |
|---|---|---|
| Company assets (debenture / floating charge) | Registration | Registrar of Companies + MPSR (movable components) |
| Land / buildings | Registration | Land Registry (title-based endorsement) |
| Goods / inventory (pledge) | Possession (physical or constructive) + optional MPSR filing | Custodian acknowledgement; MPSR registry |
| Receivables / book debts | Notice of assignment + registration | Notice to debtor; MPSR registry; Registrar of Companies |
| Shares | Share charge + stop notice + MPSR filing | Issuer/registrar; MPSR registry |
| Intellectual property | Registration at IP office + MPSR filing | KIPI / trademarks registry; MPSR registry |
The Finance Bill 2026 proposals and the CBK circulars on banking compliance in Kenya necessitate updates to several standard loan-documentation clauses. Below are the priority areas and three model clause examples for immediate adoption.
“The Borrower hereby irrevocably authorises the Lender, at the Borrower’s cost, to file, amend, extend or discharge any financing statement, charge registration or notice at any registry (including the MPSR registry, the Registrar of Companies or any Land Registry) as the Lender may consider necessary to perfect, protect or enforce any Security Interest created under this Agreement.”
“The Borrower represents and warrants that the information provided in Schedule [X] (Beneficial Ownership Declaration) is true, complete and accurate as at the date of this Agreement and undertakes to notify the Lender in writing within 14 days of any change in beneficial ownership. The Borrower consents to the Lender verifying and retaining such information as required by applicable law, including the Central Bank of Kenya circulars on beneficial ownership.”
“The Borrower undertakes, within [30] days of written request by the Lender, to execute all documents and perform all acts necessary to re-register, amend or confirm any Security Interest created under or in connection with this Agreement, as may be required by any amendment to applicable law (including the Finance Bill 2026 and any regulations or circulars made thereunder).”
Banks with large loan portfolios face the challenge of identifying which existing facilities are affected by the expanded registration requirements. The likely practical effect will be that institutions must undertake a structured remediation exercise, triaging by risk and asset type.
| Risk Band | Recommended Action | Estimated Time to Complete |
|---|---|---|
| High (exposure > KES 500 m; newly registrable security; cross-border) | Immediate re-registration + supplemental documentation; legal opinion on priority | 30 days |
| Medium (exposure KES 50–500 m; already registered but requires amendment) | File amendment or confirmation at registry; update BO records | 60 days |
| Low (exposure < KES 50 m; fully registered; no change required) | Confirm registration; update MIS records; diarise next review | 90 days |
The mid-2026 CBK circulars introduce a direct link between beneficial ownership verification and the perfection of securities in Kenya. Going forward, banks are expected to verify and record BO information at two critical points: before execution of the security document and before filing for registration at any registry. Failure to complete BO verification may result in registries rejecting filings or the CBK questioning the validity of the security interest during supervisory examinations.
| Entity Type | Evidence Required | Verification Method |
|---|---|---|
| Private limited company | BO declaration form; certified copies of share certificates or register of members; IDs/passports of all persons holding ≥ 10% interest | Cross-reference with BRS records; independent company search |
| Trust | Trust deed (or certified extract); identification of settlor, trustees and named beneficiaries | Certified copies from trustees; independent verification of trustee identity |
| Partnership / LLP | Partnership agreement; register of partners; IDs of all partners (or those with ≥ 10% share) | BRS partnership search; ID verification |
| Public company / listed entity | Latest annual return; register of substantial shareholders (≥ 5% interest) | CMA filings; NSE disclosures; company-search reports |
| Foreign company (branch or subsidiary) | Certificate of registration of foreign company; BO declaration for parent entity; IDs of directors | Apostilled documents from home jurisdiction; BRS search |
Banks should retain BO records for a minimum period consistent with CBK anti-money laundering guidelines and update them at least annually or upon any notified change in ownership.
Compliance with the expanded framework for charge registration in Kenya will require IT and operations teams to make targeted system enhancements. Relationship managers and credit analysts should receive updated training on the new registration categories and BO-verification workflows.
| Data Field | Purpose | Source System |
|---|---|---|
| Security-interest type (expanded taxonomy) | Map to correct registry and perfection method | Loan origination system |
| Registry reference number (MPSR / Land / Companies) | Track registration status and renewal dates | Registry confirmation / API integration |
| BO declaration date and status | Evidence of BO verification prior to execution and registration | KYC / compliance platform |
| Re-registration flag and deadline | Identify facilities requiring remediation under transitional rules | Remediation tracker |
| Stamp-duty payment reference | Confirm fiscal obligation met before registration | KRA iTax / finance system |
| Next renewal / amendment date | Diarise MPSR financing-statement renewals or charge confirmations | Diary / workflow engine |
Industry observers expect that the BRS will continue to enhance the MPSR registry’s API capabilities, enabling banks to automate filing and search functions. Early integration with the registry API is recommended to reduce manual filing risk.
Perfection is not merely an administrative formality, it determines priority in enforcement. A properly perfected security interest under the MPSR Act gives the secured creditor priority over unperfected interests and over subsequently perfected interests. In an insolvency scenario, perfected creditors rank ahead of unsecured creditors and, subject to statutory preferences, ahead of other secured creditors who perfected later.
| Phase | Key Deliverables | Sign-Off |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1–30 | Portfolio audit complete; gap analysis circulated; updated templates approved | Head of Legal |
| Day 31–60 | High-priority re-registrations filed; BO verifications complete for all new facilities | Chief Compliance Officer |
| Day 61–90 | Medium-priority amendments filed; MIS fields live; board report submitted | Chief Risk Officer |
| Collateral Type | Documents to Prepare | Registry / Filing |
|---|---|---|
| Company debenture | Executed debenture; board resolution; stamped copy; prescribed form | Registrar of Companies + MPSR |
| Land mortgage | Executed charge; spousal consent (if applicable); stamped copy; title deed | Land Registry |
| Pledge of goods | Pledge agreement; custodian acknowledgement; insurance assignment | Possession + optional MPSR |
| Assignment of receivables | Assignment agreement; notice to debtor; financing statement | MPSR + Registrar of Companies |
| Share charge | Share-charge instrument; stop notice; blank share-transfer forms | Issuer/registrar + MPSR |
For a comprehensive clause library and downloadable templates, refer to the forthcoming model loan-agreement clauses to comply with Finance Bill 2026 resource and the perfection of securities resources and templates page, both of which will be available shortly on this site.
The Finance Bill 2026 and the accompanying CBK circulars represent a watershed moment for banking compliance in Kenya. The expanded scope of registrable security interests, the new beneficial-ownership verification requirements and the tighter consumer-protection obligations mean that every bank’s lending, legal and compliance functions must act in concert, and act quickly. The perfection of securities in Kenya is no longer a back-office formality; it is a front-line compliance priority with direct consequences for enforceability, priority and regulatory standing.
Banks that move early, auditing their portfolios, updating templates, training their teams and integrating with the MPSR and other registries, will be best positioned to protect their security interests and meet the transitional deadlines. Those that delay risk holding imperfectly perfected securities that may be vulnerable to competing claims or regulatory challenge. For guidance on your institution’s specific exposure and remediation needs, consult with a qualified Kenyan banking and finance lawyer experienced in the perfection and registration of security interests.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Collins Otieno at Madhani Advocates LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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