World Watch/Kenya/Starting a Business

Starting a Business · Kenya

Starting a Business - Kenya

ModerateCompanies Act, 2015 (as amended by the Finance Act, 2016), administered by the Business Registration Service (BRS) via the eCitizen portal; investor entry governed by the Immigration (Class G permit) regime and the Investment Promotion Act administered by the Kenya Investment Authority (KenInvest).

A foreigner can incorporate and wholly own a private limited company in Kenya, registered online through the BRS/eCitizen system, typically within roughly 3–7 working days and with no general minimum share capital. The principal friction for a foreigner is not ownership but the immigration/investor layer: to live and work in the business a Class G (investor) permit generally requires proof of at least USD 100,000 in capital, plus obtaining a KRA PIN, tax compliance and any sector-specific licences.

100% foreign ownership allowed

Since the repeal of the 30% local-shareholding requirement (Section 975(2)(b) of the Companies Act 2015, deleted by Section 85 of the Finance Act 2016, effective 1 January 2017), foreigners may wholly own a Kenyan private limited company. Sector-specific local-equity rules can still apply in regulated industries (e.g. telecoms, insurance, mining).

Online registration via BRS/eCitizen

Company formation is done through the Business Registration Service on the eCitizen platform: reserve a name, then lodge incorporation forms (CR1, CR2, CR8) with director/shareholder, address and capital details, and pay fees online.

No general minimum capital

There is no statutory minimum share capital for an ordinary private limited company; nominal capital is commonly set at a modest figure (e.g. KES 100,000). Minimum capital thresholds arise only in regulated sectors or for immigration/investment purposes.

Typical timeline: days, not months

If documents are complete, incorporation generally completes within about 3–7 working days, with name approval taking 1–2 days and form processing/certificate issuance a few days more.

Investor permit is the real hurdle

A foreigner who wants to actively run the business needs a Class G (investor) work permit, which generally requires demonstrating at least USD 100,000 of invested/available capital; the same USD 100,000 threshold under the Investment Promotion Act unlocks KenInvest investment incentives.

Tax and compliance setup

After incorporation the company must obtain a KRA PIN and register for applicable taxes; foreign individual directors/shareholders use passports to register, but operating, banking and permit applications require a KRA PIN and tax compliance.

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