World Watch/Kenya/Digital Payments & Fintech

Digital Payments & Fintech · Kenya

Digital Payments & Fintech - Kenya

Licensing regimeNational Payment System Act, 2011 and the National Payment System Regulations, 2014, administered by the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK); complemented by the E-Money Regulations 2013 and the Central Bank of Kenya (Digital Credit Providers) Regulations 2022.

Kenya operates a mature, clearly-defined licensing regime for digital payments and fintech, overseen by the Central Bank of Kenya under the National Payment System Act 2011 and its 2014 Regulations. Payment service providers, e-money issuers and digital credit providers must each obtain CBK authorization, with defined capital thresholds and conduct rules. Open banking and an interoperable instant-payment rail (Fast Payment System) are advancing under the National Payments Strategy 2022-2025 but are still being implemented.

PSP licensing regime

Any entity offering payment services (retail processing, e-commerce collection, digital wallets, aggregation) must obtain a Payment Service Provider licence from the CBK under the NPS Act 2011 and NPS Regulations 2014. CBK authorisation is mandatory before operating.

E-money issuers & licence categories

The framework defines distinct categories — Electronic Retail Payment Service Provider, Designated Payment Instrument Issuer, E-Money Issuer and Small E-Money Issuer — each with set minimum capital (e.g. KES 5m for retail PSP, KES 20m for e-money issuer, KES 1m for small e-money issuer). E-money issuance is governed by the E-Money Regulations 2013, requiring customer funds to be held in trust at a licensed bank.

Digital credit / BNPL licensing

The Central Bank of Kenya (Digital Credit Providers) Regulations 2022 (gazetted 18 March 2022) bring previously unregulated digital lenders — broadly covering BNPL and app-based credit — under CBK licensing, with mandatory AML/CFT compliance, data protection, pricing disclosure and debt-collection conduct rules.

Active supervision and enforcement

CBK actively supervises and enforces the regime; it issued the majority of valid PSP licences in recent years and revoked PayU Kenya's payment licence effective 13 October 2025, demonstrating an operational, enforced authorization framework.

National Payments Strategy & instant-payment rails

The National Payments Strategy 2022-2025 sets out full interoperability, adoption of ISO 20022, a standardised QR code, and a 24/7 economy. A new Fast Payment System (instant-payment rail) is being developed, with PesaLink (linking ~39 banks) and M-Pesa integration central to the interoperability push.

Open banking status

Open banking is a stated objective under the National Payments Strategy and is being advanced via ISO 20022 adoption and interoperability initiatives, but it is still in the implementation/development phase rather than codified in a dedicated open-banking licensing regime.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →