Corporate tax, FATF status, sanctions exposure, data-protection law and arbitration enforceability for Kenya — the facts a founder or counsel checks before incorporating or signing cross-border. Last reviewed 2026-06-10.
The headline corporate income tax rate in Kenya is 30%. Free zones, small-business reliefs and participation exemptions can change the effective rate — treat this as the starting point.
Kenya is on the FATF grey list (increased monitoring). Expect slower bank onboarding and more KYC questions for the company and its counterparties — not a prohibition on doing business.
Kenya is not subject to broad sectoral sanctions programs in our dataset.
The applicable data-protection statute is DPA 2019 (in force since 2019). If you process EU/UK personal data you also need a valid transfer mechanism into Kenya.
Kenya is a party to the 1958 New York Convention, so a foreign arbitral award can generally be enforced by local courts — the single most important box to tick before agreeing to arbitration with a counterparty here.
Kenya is not a party to the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention. Documents issued here for use abroad (and foreign documents used here) require full consular legalisation — a slower, multi-step, costlier process. Budget extra time for any cross-border filing.
Foreigners may generally own 100% of a local company in Kenya.
Kenya requires a resident/local director. This adds real cost and a governance dependency — include it in the structure.
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