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Family Lawyers Kenya 2026: Annulment Grounds, Section 73 and Court Procedure

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

For family lawyers in Kenya and individuals navigating the end of a marriage, the choice between annulment and divorce carries profound consequences for property, children and legal status. The Marriage Act, 2014, particularly Section 73, provides the statutory framework for declaring a marriage void or voidable, yet recent judicial pronouncements in late 2025 and early 2026 have reshaped how courts evaluate annulment petitions, order remedies and protect the welfare of children. This guide sets out the grounds for annulment of marriage in Kenya, walks through the court procedure step by step, and maps the practical consequences that every petitioner and respondent must anticipate before filing.

Quick Answer: Should You Pursue Annulment or Divorce in Kenya?

The answer depends on four factors: whether a recognised ground for annulment exists, how long the marriage has lasted, whether children are involved, and how assets are held. Annulment treats the marriage as though it never validly existed (void) or as defective from the outset (voidable), while divorce dissolves a marriage that was once valid. If you can establish a ground under Section 73 of the Marriage Act, such as fraud, duress, prohibited degree of relationship, bigamy or incapacity, annulment may be the faster and more appropriate remedy. If the marriage was valid but has irretrievably broken down, divorce under Part IX of the Marriage Act is the correct route.

The comparison table later in this article provides a side-by-side breakdown. Industry observers expect the distinction to become even more significant in 2026, as courts increasingly scrutinise the legal basis of the petition before addressing ancillary relief for property and children.

What Is Annulment Under Kenyan Law? The Statutory Basis

Annulment is a court declaration that a marriage is either void (having no legal effect from inception) or voidable (valid until set aside by an order of the court). The Marriage Act, No. 4 of 2014, governs all forms of marriage in Kenya, civil, Christian, customary, Hindu and Islamic, and Part VIII addresses the grounds on which a marriage may be declared a nullity.

Key Statutory Text: Marriage Act Section 73

Section 73 of the Marriage Act, 2014 empowers the court to grant a decree of nullity of marriage on specified grounds. The section must be read together with Sections 11 and 12 of the same Act, which set out the requirements for a valid marriage (including minimum age, consent and prohibited degrees of consanguinity or affinity). Where any of those requirements is absent, the marriage may be declared void or voidable, depending on the nature of the defect.

What “Void” vs “Voidable” Means in Practice

A void marriage is one that is treated as having never existed at law, for example, a bigamous union or a marriage within prohibited degrees. No court order is strictly required to establish its invalidity, though a formal decree provides certainty. A voidable marriage is one that remains valid until a court sets it aside, for example, a marriage induced by fraud or duress, or one that has not been consummated. The distinction matters because a voidable marriage confers rights (including property rights) up to the date of the decree, while a void marriage, in principle, confers none, although Kenyan courts have increasingly exercised equitable jurisdiction to protect innocent parties and children even in void-marriage cases.

Grounds for Annulment of Marriage in Kenya: A Practitioner Checklist

The grounds for annulment recognised under the Marriage Act and developed through case law fall into the following categories. For each ground, practitioners should consider what evidence the court will require.

  • Bigamy or prior subsisting marriage. Where either party was already lawfully married at the date of the ceremony, the subsequent marriage is void. Evidence typically includes a certified copy of the earlier marriage certificate and proof that it had not been dissolved.
  • Prohibited degrees of relationship. A marriage between persons within the degrees of consanguinity or affinity specified in the First Schedule to the Marriage Act is void. Birth certificates, genealogical affidavits and, where necessary, DNA evidence may be required.
  • Underage marriage. The Marriage Act sets the minimum marriage age at 18. A marriage involving a party below this age is voidable. Evidence includes birth certificates or age-assessment reports.
  • Lack of valid consent, fraud or misrepresentation. Where consent was obtained by fraud as to the identity of the other party, or as to the nature of the ceremony, the marriage is voidable. Witness testimony and documentary evidence of the misrepresentation are essential.
  • Lack of valid consent, duress or coercion. A marriage entered into under duress or undue influence is voidable. Affidavit evidence from the petitioner, supported by contemporaneous communications (text messages, letters, recordings where admissible) and third-party witness statements, strengthens the petition.
  • Mental incapacity. If either party was, at the time of the ceremony, incapable of understanding the nature of the marriage contract due to mental disorder, the marriage is voidable. Medical reports from a qualified psychiatrist or psychologist will ordinarily be required.
  • Non-consummation. Where a marriage has not been consummated owing to the incapacity or wilful refusal of the respondent, the court may declare it voidable. Medical evidence is the primary tool, although the court may draw inferences from circumstantial evidence and the testimony of the parties.
  • Defective ceremony or non-compliance with formalities. If the marriage was not celebrated in accordance with the requirements of the Act (for example, absence of a registrar, failure to publish notice, or ceremony conducted by an unauthorised person), it may be declared void. Certified copies of the marriage register, affidavits from witnesses present at the ceremony, and evidence of the celebrant’s lack of authority are relevant.

Evidence and Proof: Witness Lists, Medical Reports and Expert Affidavits

The standard of proof in annulment proceedings is the balance of probabilities, though courts expect clear and convincing evidence given the gravity of the remedy. Practitioners should compile an evidence bundle that includes certified copies of the marriage certificate, relevant birth certificates, medical or psychiatric reports (where incapacity or non-consummation is alleged), sworn affidavits from credible witnesses, and any contemporaneous documents, such as correspondence, financial records or photographic evidence, that corroborate the ground relied upon. Expert affidavits should be filed early: courts have declined to admit late expert evidence where its absence prejudices the respondent.

Annulment vs Divorce in Kenya: Comparison Table and Decision Flowchart

Understanding how annulment differs from divorce is one of the most common questions family lawyers in Kenya are asked. The table below summarises the key distinctions.

Remedy When Available Main Legal Consequences
Annulment (decree of nullity) When the marriage is void or voidable under the Marriage Act, grounds include bigamy, prohibited degrees, fraud, duress, mental incapacity, non-consummation, underage or defective ceremony Marriage declared void or voidable from inception; court may still order restitution, maintenance and property adjustment; children’s welfare addressed under the Children Act and Constitution
Divorce (decree of dissolution) When a valid marriage has irretrievably broken down, evidenced by adultery, cruelty, desertion or two or more years of separation Marriage dissolved prospectively; division of matrimonial property under the Matrimonial Property Act, 2013; custody and maintenance determined under the Children Act and Constitution
Judicial separation Where a party does not wish to dissolve the marriage but seeks relief from the obligation to cohabit Marriage subsists; no right to remarry; court may make property, maintenance and custody orders similar to divorce

Decision flowchart for practitioners:

  1. Confirm whether a recognised ground for annulment exists. If yes, proceed to step 2. If no, consider divorce or judicial separation.
  2. Assess the time that has elapsed since the marriage ceremony and whether any limitation issue may apply.
  3. Identify whether children are involved and whether interim custody or maintenance relief is needed.
  4. Evaluate property holdings and determine whether interim preservation orders are required.
  5. Advise the client on the likely practical outcome: annulment may be faster, but the court will still address children and property.

Section 73 Annulment Procedure in Kenya: A Step-by-Step Litigation Guide

The annulment procedure in Kenya follows the general framework for matrimonial causes, with specific requirements derived from the Marriage Act and the rules of the Family Division of the High Court. The following step-by-step guide reflects current practice.

  1. Determine jurisdiction. Annulment petitions are filed in the Family Division of the High Court. Where the petitioner resides outside Nairobi, the petition may be filed at the nearest High Court station with a Family Division or designated magistrate’s court exercising delegated jurisdiction.
  2. Draft the petition. The petition should set out the parties, the date and place of the marriage, the ground(s) relied upon under the Marriage Act, and the relief sought (decree of nullity, property orders, custody orders, costs). Sample petition headings are provided below.
  3. File the petition and pay court fees. File the petition at the registry, together with a verifying affidavit and the supporting documents. Court filing fees for matrimonial causes vary; practitioners should confirm the current schedule at the relevant registry.
  4. Serve the respondent. Personal service on the respondent is required. Where the respondent cannot be traced or is outside the jurisdiction, the court may grant leave for substituted service (advertisement in a newspaper of national circulation) or service outside jurisdiction under Order 5 of the Civil Procedure Rules.
  5. Respondent’s answer. The respondent has the opportunity to file an answer (response) within the time prescribed by the rules, typically 15 days from service.
  6. Interlocutory applications. Either party may apply for interim orders, including orders for maintenance pending suit, custody of children, preservation of matrimonial property, or injunctions restraining disposal of assets.
  7. Pre-trial conference and directions. The court will convene a pre-trial conference to narrow issues, confirm witness lists and set a hearing date.
  8. Hearing. At the hearing, the petitioner presents evidence (oral testimony, affidavits, documentary and expert evidence) in support of the ground relied upon. The respondent has the right to cross-examine and present a defence.
  9. Judgment and decree. If satisfied that a ground for annulment is established, the court will pronounce a decree of nullity and make ancillary orders on property, maintenance, custody and costs.

Time Limits and Limitation Issues

The Marriage Act does not prescribe a fixed limitation period for all annulment petitions. However, for voidable marriages, particularly those based on non-consummation or fraud, undue delay in petitioning may amount to approbation (implied acceptance of the marriage), which the court may treat as a bar to relief. Early indications from 2026 practice suggest that courts are increasingly willing to examine whether the petitioner’s conduct after discovering the ground is consistent with a genuine intention to seek annulment. Practitioners should advise clients to act promptly once the ground becomes known.

Sample Annulment Petition Headings

The following headings reflect typical annulment petition Kenya practice and may be adapted to individual circumstances:

  1. Title: In the High Court of Kenya at [Station], Family Division, Cause No. [___] of 2026
  2. Parties: [Petitioner’s Full Name], Petitioner, versus, [Respondent’s Full Name], Respondent
  3. Heading: Petition for Decree of Nullity of Marriage
  4. Paragraphs: particulars of the marriage (date, place, certificate number); ground(s) relied upon (with statutory reference); factual narrative supporting each ground; particulars of children (if any); particulars of property (if seeking ancillary relief); relief sought (decree of nullity, custody, property, maintenance, costs).
  5. Verification: Verifying Affidavit of the Petitioner
  6. Supporting documents: marriage certificate, birth certificates, evidence bundles.

Property Consequences and Remedies After Annulment

One of the most significant practical questions for family lawyers in Kenya is what happens to property when a marriage is annulled. Unlike divorce, where the Matrimonial Property Act, 2013 provides a clear framework for division based on each spouse’s contribution, the property consequences of annulment are less straightforward and depend on whether the marriage was void or voidable.

In a voidable marriage, rights accrued during the subsistence of the marriage (before the decree) are generally preserved. The court may order equitable division of property acquired during the period the parties cohabited as spouses, applying principles analogous to those under the Matrimonial Property Act. In a void marriage, the traditional position was that no matrimonial property rights arose. However, Kenyan courts have moved towards a more protective approach, invoking the Constitution’s guarantee of the right to property (Article 40) and principles of equity and unjust enrichment to ensure that an innocent party is not left destitute.

Remedy When Used Typical Orders
Property adjustment order Where one party contributed (financially or non-financially) to property registered in the other’s name Transfer of a share of the property, or payment of compensation equivalent to the contribution
Maintenance order Where one party is unable to support themselves and the other has the means Periodical payments or lump sum, for a defined period or until further order
Restitution / unjust enrichment Where one party has been unjustly enriched at the expense of the other during the void or voidable marriage Monetary award restoring the value of the enrichment

Sample Interim Orders

Pending determination of the annulment petition, a party may seek interim orders such as:

  • An injunction restraining the respondent from disposing of, encumbering or diminishing specified assets.
  • An order for maintenance pending suit, securing basic living expenses and school fees for children.
  • An order granting interim custody of children, with defined access rights for the non-custodial parent.

Steps to Secure Assets Pending Determination

  1. Conduct an asset search early, obtain land registry searches, company registry records and bank disclosure orders where justified.
  2. File the application for interim preservation simultaneously with or shortly after the main petition.
  3. Provide the court with specific evidence of the risk of dissipation, vague assertions are insufficient.
  4. Serve the application promptly and seek an expedited hearing date.

Children, Custody and Annulment: Rights and Practical Outcomes

The annulment of a marriage does not extinguish parental rights or obligations. Article 53 of the Constitution of Kenya guarantees every child the right to parental care and protection, and this right applies regardless of whether the parents’ marriage is valid, void or voidable. The Children Act, 2022 reinforces this principle by requiring that all decisions concerning children be guided by the best interest of the child standard.

In annulment proceedings, the court will make orders for custody, care and control, access (contact) and child maintenance as part of the ancillary relief. The court is not limited by the characterisation of the marriage as void or voidable; the welfare of the child is the paramount consideration. Both parents have equal responsibility to provide for the child, whether or not they were ever validly married.

Who Has Custody When Parents Are Not Married?

Where a marriage is declared void, meaning it never existed at law, the parents are treated as unmarried. Under the Children Act and the Constitution, both parents retain parental responsibility. In practice, the court will determine the living arrangements and contact schedule that best serve the child’s welfare, having regard to the child’s age, the bond with each parent, stability of home environment and the child’s own wishes (where the child is of sufficient age and maturity). The likely practical effect in most cases is that custody arrangements after annulment closely mirror those ordered in divorce proceedings.

Sample Custody Order Language

A typical custody order in annulment proceedings might read:

“It is ordered that the care and control of the child [Name], born on [Date], be granted to the Petitioner, with reasonable access to the Respondent on alternate weekends and during half of all school holidays. The Respondent shall pay monthly maintenance of KES [Amount] towards the upkeep and education of the child, payable on or before the 5th day of each month.”

Costs, Fees and ADR Options for Family Lawyers in Kenya

Legal costs in family matters vary widely depending on the complexity of the case, the seniority of counsel and whether the matter is contested. Court filing fees for matrimonial causes are relatively modest, but legal representation fees can range significantly. Factors that influence cost include the number of interlocutory applications, whether expert evidence is required, the duration of the hearing and whether an appeal is anticipated.

Mediation is an increasingly attractive alternative. The Judiciary of Kenya has encouraged court-annexed mediation in family disputes, and the Mediation Act, 2012 provides a formal framework. Mediation can resolve issues of custody, maintenance and property division more quickly and at lower cost than a fully contested hearing, while preserving the parties’ relationship as co-parents.

Low-Cost Options and Pro Bono Referrals

Parties with limited financial resources may access legal aid through the National Legal Aid Service (NLAS), the Federation of Women Lawyers Kenya (FIDA Kenya), or through pro bono programmes coordinated by the Law Society of Kenya. Self-representation is also possible, though professional advice is strongly recommended given the complexity of annulment law. To explore representation options, find a Kenya family lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.

Practice Tips: Petitions, Evidence and Common Pitfalls

  • Act promptly. Delay weakens a voidable-marriage claim. File as soon as the ground is discovered and documented.
  • Preserve all communications. Text messages, emails, WhatsApp conversations and social media records can be powerful evidence of fraud, duress or non-consummation.
  • Obtain contemporaneous medical evidence. Where incapacity or non-consummation is alleged, arrange a medical examination early, retrospective evidence carries less weight.
  • Separate your grounds. If multiple grounds exist, plead each distinctly. Courts prefer clarity over overlapping allegations.
  • Avoid admission language. Do not make statements in the petition or affidavit that inadvertently confirm the validity of the marriage (e.g., referring to the respondent as “my husband/wife” without qualification).
  • Consider the children from the outset. File for interim custody and maintenance alongside the main petition, not as an afterthought.
  • Secure assets early. Apply for interim injunctions before the respondent has time to dissipate or transfer property.
  • Verify the marriage register. Obtain certified copies of the marriage certificate and register entry, discrepancies in the register can support a defective-ceremony ground.
  • Brief expert witnesses thoroughly. Psychiatric or medical experts must understand the legal test, not just the clinical picture.
  • Anticipate the respondent’s defence. Common defences include approbation (the petitioner accepted the marriage despite knowing of the defect) and delay.
  • Comply strictly with service requirements. Defective service is the most frequent cause of adjournments and wasted costs in annulment cases.
  • Keep the client informed. Annulment proceedings can be emotionally charged. Regular communication reduces client anxiety and prevents instructions being given under stress.

Conclusion: Choosing the Right Path Forward

Annulment under Kenyan law is a powerful remedy, but only where the right ground exists and the evidence supports it. For separating spouses, the decision between annulment and divorce should be made with careful legal advice that accounts for property, children, timing and the strength of available evidence. The 2026 judicial landscape signals that courts will continue to hold petitioners to a high evidentiary standard while protecting children and innocent parties through equitable relief. Whether you are a practitioner advising a client or an individual considering your options, early and well-informed legal guidance from experienced family lawyers in Kenya is essential. To connect with a qualified advocate, visit the Kenya lawyer directory on Global Law Experts.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Veronica Kimiti at Kimiti & Associates Advocates LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Kenya Law, National Council for Law Reporting (Marriage Act No. 4 of 2014; Children Act 2022; Constitution of Kenya)
  2. Judiciary of Kenya, High Court / Family Division
  3. Daily Nation (nation.africa)
  4. F.M. Muteti & Co. Advocates
  5. Law Society of Kenya
  6. UN Women Africa
  7. Judy Thongori & Co Advocates

FAQs

What are the grounds for annulment of a marriage in Kenya?
The recognised grounds include bigamy, marriage within prohibited degrees of relationship, underage marriage, fraud or misrepresentation, duress, mental incapacity, non-consummation and defective ceremony. These are derived from the Marriage Act, 2014 and developed through case law.
Annulment declares that a marriage was void or defective from inception, while divorce dissolves a valid marriage that has irretrievably broken down. The comparison table above sets out the key distinctions in detail.
The petitioner files a petition in the Family Division of the High Court, supported by a verifying affidavit and evidence bundle. There is no single fixed limitation period for all grounds, but delay, especially for voidable marriages, may be treated as approbation and bar relief. Prompt action is advisable.
Yes. For voidable marriages, the court may divide property acquired during the marriage applying equitable principles. For void marriages, courts have invoked constitutional property rights and unjust enrichment doctrines to protect innocent parties.
Annulment does not affect children’s rights. The court will make custody, access and maintenance orders guided by the best interest of the child standard under the Children Act, 2022 and Article 53 of the Constitution.
You should gather the marriage certificate, birth certificates of the parties and any children, medical or psychiatric reports (where relevant), witness affidavits, contemporaneous communications evidencing the ground relied upon, and any property records needed for ancillary relief.
If the court finds that the ground for annulment is not established but the marriage has irretrievably broken down, it may permit the petitioner to amend the petition to seek divorce instead. Practitioners should consider pleading in the alternative from the outset to avoid further delay and cost.

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Family Lawyers Kenya 2026: Annulment Grounds, Section 73 and Court Procedure

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