Global Law Experts Logo
banking law reforms kenya

Banking Law Reforms Kenya 2026: Lender Obligations on Collateral, Affordability & Secured Lending

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last updated: May 11, 2026

The banking law reforms Kenya is experiencing in 2026 represent the most significant overhaul of lender obligations in nearly a decade, driven simultaneously by the Finance Bill 2026 (published 30 April 2026), a series of Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) circulars reinforcing the consumer protection framework, and draft Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) regulations released for public comment on 18 March 2026. Together, these instruments impose new duties on affordability testing, collateral registration and perfection of securities, and prudential treatment of virtual-asset counterparties. This practical compliance guide translates those regulatory changes into step-by-step actions that in-house legal teams, credit officers and compliance managers can implement immediately, complete with checklists, timelines and a comparison of obligations across entity types.

Executive Summary, What Lenders Must Do Now

Board members, credit-committee chairs and compliance officers need a concise action list. The following eight priorities distil every 2026 obligation into decisions that can be assigned today.

  • Update your affordability-assessment policy. Align internal underwriting criteria with the CBK consumer protection framework’s enhanced income-and-expense verification requirements. Ensure every new credit decision is supported by documented evidence of a borrower’s capacity to repay.
  • Run a sample portfolio-impact analysis. Select a representative sample of existing loans and stress-test them against the new affordability benchmarks. Identify exposures where repayment ratios exceed the thresholds signalled in CBK circulars 2026.
  • Register (or re-register) existing security interests. Confirm that every charge, debenture and assignment currently on your books is perfected in the collateral registry Kenya now administers through the Business Registration Service (BRS). Remedy any defective descriptions or missing debt amounts.
  • Revise standard security documentation. Amend template charge instruments, debentures and assignment agreements to reflect the statutory amendments introduced by the Finance Bill 2026.
  • Implement record-retention schedules. Adopt a minimum seven-year retention period for affordability evidence, registry filings and borrower correspondence, with secure, auditable storage.
  • Establish a borrower-complaints log. Create (or upgrade) a centralised redress register that captures complaints, resolution timelines and escalation paths, as required under the CBK consumer protection framework.
  • Assess VASP counterparty exposure. If your institution lends to virtual-asset businesses, conduct enhanced due diligence on licensing status, custody arrangements and segregation of client assets, consistent with the draft virtual asset regs Kenya framework.
  • Brief the board within 30 days. Prepare a board paper summarising the Finance Bill 2026 impact on banks, the CBK circular requirements and the compliance budget needed for implementation.

The sections below unpack each obligation in full, with legislative references, procedural guidance and ready-to-adopt templates.

Finance Bill 2026, What Changed and Immediate Banking Law Reforms Kenya Must Address

The Finance Bill 2026 was published by the National Treasury on 30 April 2026 and is currently before the National Assembly. While certain provisions may be amended during the parliamentary process, prudent lenders should begin compliance preparations now, given that the Bill’s commencement date is expected to coincide with the start of the 2026/27 fiscal year. Industry observers expect most secured-transaction provisions to survive the committee stage with only minor drafting adjustments.

Key Amendments, Statutory Changes in Plain English

  • Expanded definition of registrable security interests. The Bill broadens the categories of movable assets over which a charge may be registered, explicitly including agricultural produce, intellectual-property rights and receivables. The practical effect is that lenders can now perfect security over asset classes that previously required workaround structures.
  • Consumer-protection overlay on lending contracts. New provisions require every credit agreement to contain prescribed disclosures, including the total cost of credit, all fees and the annual percentage rate, in a standardised format. Non-compliant agreements face unenforceability of penalty clauses.
  • Stamp-duty and filing-fee adjustments. The Bill revises the ad valorem rates applicable to charge instruments and introduces a flat registration fee for electronic filings at the BRS. Lenders should update their cost-of-credit calculators accordingly.
  • Enhanced penalty regime. Late registration of charges (beyond the statutory window) now attracts a daily penalty, replacing the previous fixed-fine model. The likely practical effect will be greater urgency to file within the prescribed period.
  • Interest-rate governance. The Bill reinforces the requirement that any variation in lending rates must be communicated to borrowers in writing at least 30 days before the effective date, with a right to exit the facility penalty-free within that window.

Timetable and Transitional Provisions

Event Date / Period Lender Action Required
Finance Bill 2026 published 30 April 2026 Begin internal gap analysis against current policies and templates
Parliamentary committee stage May – June 2026 (expected) Monitor amendments; attend public-participation hearings via Kenya Bankers Association
Presidential assent (anticipated) Late June 2026 Finalise all template and policy changes within 30 days of assent
Commencement of secured-transaction provisions 1 July 2026 (expected) File all new charges using revised BRS forms from this date
Transitional period for existing charges 180 days from commencement (expected) Re-register or confirm registration of all pre-existing security interests

CBK Circulars 2026 and the CBK Consumer Protection Framework, Affordability Testing for Lenders

The Central Bank of Kenya has issued a series of prudential circulars in 2026 strengthening the consumer protection framework that governs retail and SME lending. The core theme is affordability testing: lenders must demonstrate, with documented evidence, that every borrower can service a facility without undue financial hardship. The CBK circulars 2026 build on the existing Prudential Guidelines and the CBK Act (Cap 491), but they introduce significantly more prescriptive data-collection and record-keeping requirements than any previous guidance.

Designing an Affordability Test, Required Data Points and Scoring Approach

Under the enhanced framework, affordability testing lenders must conduct involves, at a minimum, the following elements:

  • Verified gross income. Payslips (minimum three months), employer confirmation letters, tax returns (iTax) for salaried borrowers; audited or management accounts for business borrowers.
  • Documented essential expenditure. Rent or mortgage payments, utility bills, existing debt-service obligations (obtained via a Credit Reference Bureau report), school fees and insurance premiums.
  • Disposable-income calculation. Net income minus essential expenditure, expressed as a ratio against the proposed facility repayment. Industry observers expect CBK to formalise a minimum disposable-income threshold in subsequent guidance.
  • Stress-test overlay. Lenders should model the borrower’s ability to repay if interest rates rise by at least 300 basis points or if income drops by 20 percent, reflecting CBK’s stated expectation that institutions apply forward-looking affordability measures.

Documentation and Evidence Retention, Sample Retention Schedule

Document Type Source / Verification Method Minimum Retention Period
Payslips / employer letter Original or certified copy; employer call-back 7 years from loan maturity or discharge
CRB report Licensed CRB (e.g., TransUnion, Metropol, Creditinfo) 7 years
Bank statements (3–6 months) Direct from account-holding institution or verified digital feed 7 years
Affordability-assessment worksheet Internal credit-scoring system output 7 years
Borrower disclosure acknowledgement Signed copy (physical or e-signature) 7 years
Complaints and redress records Internal complaints management system 7 years

Internal Governance, Disclosures to Borrowers and Complaint Handling

The CBK consumer protection framework mandates that lenders provide borrowers with a standardised pre-contractual information sheet, sometimes called a Key Facts Statement, before any credit agreement is executed. This document must set out the total cost of credit, the repayment schedule, all applicable fees, the consequences of default and the borrower’s right to lodge a complaint.

Internally, every institution must maintain a complaints register that tracks the date of receipt, nature of the complaint, responsible officer, resolution date and outcome. CBK expects that at least 80 percent of complaints are resolved within 14 business days. Where a complaint remains unresolved beyond 30 days, the borrower must be informed in writing of the right to escalate to the CBK’s consumer-protection unit. Lenders that fail to maintain adequate complaint-handling infrastructure face supervisory action, including restrictions on new lending approvals.

Collateral Registry Reforms, Perfection and Priority, Step-by-Step for Lenders

The collateral registry Kenya has been developing through the Business Registration Service (BRS) is central to the 2026 banking law reforms. The BRS, established under the Business Registration Service Act, 2015, is progressively digitising the registration of security interests, moving from a paper-based system to an electronic platform that supports real-time searches, online filings and automated priority determination.

These changes have profound implications for the perfection of securities Kenya practitioners have long navigated. A security interest that is not properly registered is unperfected, meaning it cannot be enforced against third parties and ranks behind perfected interests in insolvency.

Before You Lend: Search and Due Diligence Checklist

Before advancing funds, every lender should conduct a registry search to establish whether the proposed collateral is already encumbered. The following checklist ensures thorough pre-lending due diligence:

  • Search the BRS electronic register by grantor name, company registration number and asset description. Request a formal search certificate.
  • Verify the search date. A search certificate is only reliable as of its issue date. Industry practice is to treat search results as stale if more than 14 days old at the point of disbursement.
  • Cross-reference with the Companies Registry for any registered charges against the borrower’s company (if lending to a corporate entity).
  • Check the Lands Registry separately for any immovable-property security, the BRS movable-asset register does not replace the land-charge registration system.
  • Confirm the borrower’s CRB status to identify any existing indebtedness that may indicate over-encumbrance.

How to Register (Perfect) a Security Interest, Procedural Steps and Common Pitfalls

Perfection of securities Kenya requires follows a structured process. The table below outlines each step, the action required and the evidence a lender should retain.

Step Action Evidence to Retain
1. Prepare the security instrument Draft the charge, debenture or assignment agreement using updated templates that reflect Finance Bill 2026 requirements Signed original instrument; board resolution (if corporate grantor)
2. Execute and witness Ensure proper execution, two directors or a director and company secretary for companies; attestation for individuals Execution page with witness details; identification documents
3. Pay stamp duty Assess and pay the applicable ad valorem duty (check revised rates under Finance Bill 2026) via the Kenya Revenue Authority e-Stamp system e-Stamp certificate; payment receipt
4. Complete the BRS registration form File the prescribed form electronically via the BRS portal, providing: grantor details, secured-party details, collateral description, secured-obligation amount and maturity date System-generated acknowledgement; filing reference number
5. Obtain registration confirmation Download the registration certificate once the BRS has processed the filing (target turnaround: 3–5 business days) Registration certificate with unique filing number and priority timestamp
6. Diarise renewal / discharge dates Set internal calendar reminders for any required renewals and for the discharge filing once the facility is repaid Diary entry; confirmation of diarisation

Common pitfalls to avoid: defective or overly generic collateral descriptions (e.g., “all assets” without specificity); failure to include the secured-obligation amount; late filing beyond the statutory window (which now attracts daily penalties under the Finance Bill 2026); and neglecting to update the register when the security is amended or the secured amount changes.

Amendments, Renewals and Discharges

Where the terms of a registered security interest change, for example, an increase in the facility amount, an extension of tenor or a substitution of collateral, the lender must file an amendment notice with the BRS within the prescribed period. Failure to amend a registration may result in the original filing being treated as inaccurate, potentially undermining enforcement.

Upon full repayment of the secured obligation, the lender is obliged to file a discharge within 14 days. Delayed discharge filings impair the borrower’s ability to offer the same collateral to another lender and may expose the secured party to claims for compensation.

Priority Disputes and Enforcement Practicalities

Priority among competing security interests is determined by the date and time of registration, a first-to-file rule. Where two lenders claim the same collateral, the one whose registration was filed earlier prevails. In insolvency proceedings, an unperfected security interest is subordinated to the claims of all perfected secured creditors and, in many cases, to preferential creditors such as employees.

Enforcement of security over movable assets follows the procedures set out in the applicable security agreement, subject to any statutory requirements for notice and fair-value realisation. Lenders should ensure that their security documents contain clearly drafted enforcement clauses, including the right to take possession, appoint a receiver or sell the collateral upon default, to avoid challenges from borrowers or competing claimants.

Virtual Assets, VASP Draft Regulations and Lending Counterparty Risk

On 18 March 2026, the CBK published a public notice inviting comments on draft Virtual Asset Service Provider regulations. These virtual asset regs Kenya represent the first comprehensive attempt to bring crypto-asset businesses within the formal regulatory perimeter. For banks and non-bank lenders, the draft regulations carry significant implications, not because lenders themselves must obtain VASP licences, but because lending to (or accepting collateral from) VASP businesses introduces counterparty and prudential risks that must be actively managed.

The draft regulations propose a licensing regime for any entity that exchanges, transfers, stores or administers virtual assets on behalf of clients. VASPs will be required to maintain segregated client-asset accounts, implement robust AML/KYC procedures aligned with the Proceeds of Crime and Anti-Money Laundering Act, and submit regular prudential returns to the CBK.

Early indications suggest that CBK expects banks to exercise heightened caution when establishing banking relationships with VASPs. Practically, this means conducting enhanced due diligence that goes beyond standard KYC, including verification of the VASP’s licensing status, independent assessment of its custody and segregation arrangements, and ongoing monitoring of transaction patterns for red flags.

Lending to VASP Businesses, Due Diligence Checklist

  • Licensing confirmation. Verify that the VASP holds (or has applied for) a licence under the draft regulations. Until the licensing regime is fully operational, require written representations regarding compliance status.
  • Custody and segregation. Confirm that client virtual assets are held in segregated wallets, separate from the VASP’s proprietary holdings. Obtain third-party audit confirmation where available.
  • AML/KYC programme. Review the VASP’s AML/KYC policies and request evidence of compliance with the Financial Reporting Centre (FRC) reporting obligations.
  • Valuation methodology. If virtual assets are offered as collateral, require independent daily valuation, conservative loan-to-value ratios (industry observers expect haircuts of 50 percent or more to be prudent) and the right to call for additional margin.
  • Contractual protections. Include contractual provisions granting the lender the right to custody or liquidate virtual-asset collateral upon default, with clear jurisdiction and governing-law clauses.

Practical Secured-Lending Compliance Checklist, Your 2026 Playbook

The following secured-lending compliance checklist consolidates every obligation discussed in this guide into a single, assignable action list. Each item identifies the responsible internal function to ensure accountability.

Board and Executive Actions

  • Approve an updated credit policy incorporating affordability-testing requirements, revised collateral-registration procedures and VASP counterparty due diligence. Owner: Board Risk Committee.
  • Allocate a compliance budget for system upgrades (registry portal integration, CRB data feeds, complaints-management software) and staff training. Owner: CFO / COO.
  • Appoint a compliance champion responsible for tracking CBK circular issuances and coordinating the institution’s response. Owner: Chief Compliance Officer.

Origination Checklist

  • Collect and verify all affordability evidence (payslips, bank statements, CRB report, expense declarations) before any credit decision is made.
  • Issue a Key Facts Statement to the borrower, compliant with the CBK consumer protection framework, and obtain signed acknowledgement.
  • Conduct a BRS registry search no more than 14 days before disbursement and retain the search certificate on file.

Documentation and Perfection Checklist

  • Use updated template security documents reflecting Finance Bill 2026 requirements.
  • Pay stamp duty via KRA e-Stamp and retain the certificate.
  • File the BRS registration form within the statutory window and obtain a registration certificate.
  • Diarise renewal and discharge dates in the institution’s loan-management system.

Post-Disbursement Monitoring

  • Monitor collateral values at least quarterly (monthly for volatile assets such as virtual assets).
  • Track borrower complaints in the centralised redress register and report monthly to senior management.
  • Run periodic affordability re-assessments for facilities with variable interest rates or extended tenors.

Portfolio Remediation Steps

  • Identify at-risk loans where existing security interests may not be properly perfected under the new BRS regime.
  • Re-register or amend defective filings within the transitional period (expected 180 days from commencement of Finance Bill 2026 provisions).
  • Reclassify VASP-exposed facilities for enhanced prudential monitoring and apply appropriate risk weightings pending final CBK guidance.

Comparison Table: Obligations by Entity Type and Timeline of Key Dates

Obligations by Entity Type

Entity Type 2026 Obligations (Summary) Key Deadline / Note
Regulated banks Mandatory affordability testing; updated prudential reporting; register all charges via BRS; issue Key Facts Statements; maintain complaints register; enhanced VASP counterparty due diligence Immediate, policies to be updated within 30–90 days of Finance Bill commencement and CBK circulars
Non-bank lenders / MFIs Similar affordability obligations; stricter CRB compliance; potential CBK licensing interactions for deposit-taking MFIs; collateral registry filings for movable-asset security Varies, monitor CBK and Parliament notices; align with applicable prudential guidelines
VASPs and crypto counterparties Licensing under draft VASP regs; enhanced AML/KYC; segregation of client assets; prudential reporting to CBK; restrictions on offering virtual assets as collateral without custody controls Draft regs published 18 March 2026, licensing timelines to be confirmed after public-comment period closes

Timeline of Key Legislative and Regulatory Dates

Date Event Significance for Lenders
18 March 2026 CBK publishes draft VASP regulations for public comment Lenders with VASP exposure should begin enhanced due-diligence preparations
Q1 2026 CBK circulars 2026 on consumer protection and affordability issued Triggers immediate policy-update obligations for all regulated lenders
30 April 2026 Finance Bill 2026 published by National Treasury Statutory amendments to secured transactions, disclosure and penalty regimes
May–June 2026 (expected) Parliamentary committee stage and public participation Final opportunity to influence drafting via industry submissions
Late June 2026 (expected) Presidential assent to Finance Act 2026 Commencement of new provisions; start of transitional periods
1 July 2026 (expected) Commencement of secured-transaction and disclosure provisions All new filings must use revised BRS forms and comply with enhanced disclosure rules
~December 2026 (expected) End of 180-day transitional period for existing charges Deadline to re-register or confirm registration of pre-existing security interests

Conclusion, Banking Law Reforms Kenya Demand Immediate Action

The convergence of the Finance Bill 2026, CBK circulars 2026 and draft VASP regulations creates a compliance landscape that no Kenyan lender can afford to ignore. The banking law reforms Kenya is implementing in 2026 touch every stage of the lending lifecycle, from origination and affordability assessment through documentation, perfection and post-disbursement monitoring to enforcement and discharge. Institutions that move quickly to update policies, retrain staff and remediate existing portfolios will not only avoid supervisory sanctions but will also strengthen their credit quality and borrower relationships.

The secured-lending compliance checklist and step-by-step guidance above are designed to be adopted directly into board papers, compliance manuals and credit-officer training materials. As the legislative and regulatory landscape continues to evolve, particularly around virtual assets and BRS digitisation, lenders should monitor CBK and parliamentary publications closely and seek specialist advice when implementing these changes.

For institutions looking to stress-test their readiness, a tailored gap analysis against the full suite of 2026 obligations is the logical next step. Early engagement with experienced banking-law counsel ensures that compliance is not merely reactive but becomes a competitive advantage in Kenya’s rapidly evolving financial-services market.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Central Bank of Kenya, Legislation & Guidelines
  2. Bowmans, Kenya Banking Sector Commentary
  3. Chambers Practice Guides, Banking & Finance Kenya

FAQs

What are the main banking law changes in Kenya for 2026?
The principal changes comprise the Finance Bill 2026 (expanding registrable security interests, enhancing consumer-protection disclosures and revising penalty regimes), CBK circulars 2026 (strengthening affordability-testing and complaint-handling obligations under the consumer protection framework), BRS collateral registry upgrades and the draft VASP regulations published on 18 March 2026.
The Finance Bill 2026 impact on banks includes broader collateral-registration categories, mandatory pre-contractual disclosures (Key Facts Statements), revised stamp-duty and filing-fee structures, daily penalties for late registration and a 30-day advance-notice requirement before varying lending rates. Lenders must update templates, cost-of-credit calculators and internal policies before commencement.
Affordability testing lenders must conduct requires verified gross income (payslips, tax returns or audited accounts), documented essential expenditure, a disposable-income calculation expressed as a ratio against proposed repayments, a stress-test overlay (modelling rate increases and income shocks) and signed borrower acknowledgement. All evidence must be retained for a minimum of seven years.
Perfection of securities Kenya requires involves five steps: prepare and execute the security instrument; pay stamp duty via e-Stamp; complete and file the BRS registration form electronically with full collateral descriptions and secured-obligation amounts; obtain the registration certificate with a priority timestamp; and diarise renewal and discharge dates. Common defects include generic asset descriptions and failure to file within the statutory window.
No lender is obliged to accept virtual assets as collateral. Given the nascent state of the virtual asset regs Kenya is developing, industry observers recommend extreme caution. If virtual assets are accepted, lenders should require independent daily valuation, conservative loan-to-value ratios with haircuts of at least 50 percent, segregated custody and contractual rights to liquidate on default. Until the VASP licensing regime is fully operational, a blanket prohibition in credit policy may be the most prudent approach.
Under the CBK consumer protection framework and general prudential guidelines, lenders should retain all affordability evidence, CRB reports, registry search certificates, registration confirmations, borrower disclosures, correspondence and complaints records for a minimum of seven years from the date of loan maturity, discharge or final complaint resolution, whichever is later.
Credit officers should re-search the BRS registry to confirm that every existing security interest is correctly registered and perfected; verify that collateral descriptions match current BRS requirements; run sample affordability audits on a representative portfolio subset; and flag any VASP-exposed facilities for enhanced monitoring and reclassification under revised prudential risk weightings.

Find the right Advisory Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading advisory professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
ADVISORS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF ADVISORS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GAE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Banking Law Reforms Kenya 2026: Lender Obligations on Collateral, Affordability & Secured Lending

Send welcome message

Custom Message