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Kenya’s merger control landscape shifted decisively in 2026 with the Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) introducing a mandatory, suspensory notification regime backed by revised financial thresholds and a restructured fee schedule. For M&A lawyers in Kenya, and for international deal teams targeting Kenyan assets, the reforms mean that no qualifying transaction may close before CAK clearance is obtained. This article delivers a practical merger control checklist, worked fee examples, a step-by-step filing timeline and structuring guidance designed for general counsel, transaction lawyers and advisers navigating the new regime. Competition law in Kenya is now a gating item on every deal timeline, and understanding the mechanics is no longer optional.
Kenya’s merger control regime is anchored in the Competition Act, 2010 (Cap. 504, Laws of Kenya), which establishes the CAK as the sole regulator with authority to review, approve, conditionally clear or prohibit mergers. Part IV of the Act, supplemented by the Competition (General) Rules and sector-specific guidelines, sets out the substantive test, procedural requirements and penalty provisions that govern every transaction meeting the statutory thresholds.
Section 2 of the Competition Act defines a merger broadly. It captures any acquisition of shares, assets or a controlling interest that results in a change of control over a business or part of a business. The definition extends beyond conventional share purchases to include asset deals, joint ventures that perform on a lasting basis all functions of an autonomous economic entity, and certain reorganisations that alter the competitive structure of a market. Practitioners should note that the concept of “control” is interpreted functionally: de facto influence through board representation, veto rights or commercial agreements can trigger notification obligations even where equity ownership remains below 50 per cent.
CAK asserts jurisdiction where the merging parties, or their combined enterprise, meet specified turnover or asset thresholds within Kenya, or where the transaction has an appreciable effect on competition within the Kenyan market. The jurisdictional net is wide: a foreign-to-foreign transaction with no Kenyan entity can still require merger notification in Kenya if the target generates Kenyan turnover or holds assets within the country.
| Statute / Instrument | Regulator | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Competition Act, 2010 (Part IV) | Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) | Mandatory pre-merger notification for transactions meeting thresholds; suspensory effect on closing |
| Competition (General) Rules | CAK | Procedural mechanics: forms, fees, timelines and document requirements |
| Kenya Gazette Notices (2026) | CAK / Cabinet Secretary | Updated financial thresholds and revised fee schedule effective 2026 |
The 2026 threshold revisions represent a significant recalibration. Under the updated framework, merger transactions in Kenya are classified into three categories, excluded, small and large, based on the combined turnover or asset value of the merging parties within Kenya. Only transactions that fall below the lowest threshold are excluded from mandatory notification. Both small and large mergers must be notified to CAK before implementation, with large mergers subject to the most detailed review.
| Category | Combined Turnover / Asset Test (KES) | Notification Required? | Review Intensity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Excluded merger | Below KES 500 million combined turnover or below KES 500 million combined assets in Kenya | No (but CAK retains call-in power) | N/A |
| Small merger | KES 500 million – KES 1 billion combined turnover or assets in Kenya | Yes, mandatory pre-merger notification | Expedited (Phase I) |
| Large merger | Above KES 1 billion combined turnover or assets in Kenya | Yes, mandatory pre-merger notification | Full substantive review (Phase I + possible Phase II) |
Note, as of 7 May 2026: threshold figures should be confirmed against the relevant Kenya Gazette notice and the latest CAK guidance. CAK retains discretion to call in excluded mergers where competitive concerns arise.
Example A, Domestic acquisition: A Kenyan manufacturing company (turnover KES 700 million) acquires 100 per cent of a competing Kenyan producer (turnover KES 400 million). Combined turnover = KES 1.1 billion. This exceeds the KES 1 billion threshold and qualifies as a large merger. Mandatory notification and full substantive review apply.
Example B, Foreign acquirer with Kenyan turnover: A multinational headquartered in London acquires a Kenyan subsidiary of a South African group. The target has Kenyan turnover of KES 600 million; the acquirer has no direct Kenyan turnover but supplies goods generating KES 200 million in Kenyan sales. Combined Kenyan turnover = KES 800 million. This is a small merger requiring mandatory pre-notification and expedited review.
The 2026 fee schedule introduced tiered filing fees that scale with the value of the transaction and the merger category. The fee structure is designed to be self-funding for CAK and to incentivise early, accurate notifications. Merger filing fees in Kenya are payable at the time of submission and are non-refundable.
| Merger Category | Combined Value Band (KES) | Filing Fee (KES) |
|---|---|---|
| Small merger | 500 million – 1 billion | KES 500,000 |
| Large merger (Tier 1) | 1 billion – 5 billion | KES 1,000,000 |
| Large merger (Tier 2) | 5 billion – 10 billion | KES 2,000,000 |
| Large merger (Tier 3) | Above 10 billion | KES 5,000,000 |
Note, as of 7 May 2026: verify exact fee bands against the latest CAK fee schedule published in the Kenya Gazette. CAK may adjust bands periodically.
Failure to notify a qualifying merger, or implementing a transaction before CAK clearance, exposes the parties to severe consequences under the Competition Act. These include financial penalties of up to KES 10 million, the potential unwinding of the transaction on CAK’s order, and reputational damage that can stall future regulatory approvals. Directors and officers may face personal liability where non-compliance is willful. Industry observers expect CAK to take an increasingly robust enforcement posture as the suspensory regime matures.
The following checklist is designed for transaction counsel managing the CAK notification process from pre-LOI planning through to post-clearance completion. Each step should be adapted to the specific deal structure and timeline.
| Document | Why Required | Who Prepares |
|---|---|---|
| Completed CAK merger notification form | Mandatory filing form, initiates review | Transaction counsel |
| Copies of SPA / key transaction documents | Evidence of transaction structure, conditions and parties | Lead M&A counsel |
| Audited financial statements (3 years) for all merging parties | Turnover and asset threshold verification | Finance / CFO team |
| Market share data and competitor analysis | Competition assessment, horizontal / vertical overlap | Transaction counsel + economist (if applicable) |
| Organisational charts (pre- and post-merger) | Control analysis, identify change of control | Corporate secretary / counsel |
| Board resolutions authorising the transaction | Proof of corporate authority | Corporate secretary |
| Proof of filing fee payment | CAK will not process without fee confirmation | Finance team |
| Entity Type | CAK Notification Required? | Practical Filing Note |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic acquirer acquiring Kenyan target (shares) | Likely, apply thresholds using combined Kenyan turnover / market share | File if thresholds met; include local financials and market share exhibits |
| Foreign acquirer acquiring Kenyan assets / subsidiary | Likely, Kenyan nexus through asset location or turnover | Demonstrate Kenyan turnover or assets; use worked example to calculate fees |
| Minority investment (<15%) | Often not required unless control changes | Check whether investment gives de facto control; document minority rights and protections |
Under the 2026 reforms, Kenya operates a suspensory merger control system. This means that a notified transaction may not be implemented, in whole or in part, until CAK has issued its determination. Any purported closing before clearance is void and exposes the parties to penalties. The suspensory effect begins at the point of notification and ends when CAK issues a clearance or prohibition decision.
| Phase | Indicative Timeframe | CAK Action | Practical Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completeness check | 7–14 days from filing | CAK confirms filing is complete or requests further information | Submit a comprehensive filing the first time, gaps reset the clock |
| Phase I (initial assessment) | 30–60 days | CAK assesses competitive impact; most small mergers cleared here | Prepare a concise competition assessment memo to expedite review |
| Phase II (extended review) | 60–120 days (may extend further) | Detailed investigation for large or complex mergers; third-party consultations | Engage proactively with CAK; offer remedies early if overlap is material |
| Decision | Within Phase I or II timeline | Unconditional clearance, conditional clearance or prohibition | Diarise the statutory deadline and follow up promptly if CAK is silent |
Where CAK identifies competition concerns but considers that the merger can proceed with appropriate safeguards, it may impose conditions. Common conditions in Kenya include divestiture of overlapping business units, behavioural undertakings (such as maintaining supply to third parties), employment preservation commitments, and reporting obligations for a defined monitoring period. Parties should build flexibility into their SPA to accommodate potential conditions, including mechanisms for price adjustment if a divestiture is required.
Not every transaction requires CAK notification, but the boundaries of the exemptions are narrower than many international deal teams assume. Understanding these limits is critical for M&A lawyers advising on Kenyan deals.
Suspensory merger control in Kenya introduces deal-execution risk that must be managed contractually. The SPA should allocate this risk clearly and anticipate CAK timelines.
The 2026 reforms to Kenya’s merger control regime have made CAK notification a non-negotiable gating item for any transaction that meets the revised thresholds. M&A lawyers in Kenya, and their international counterparts advising on cross-border deals, must integrate the suspensory notification process into deal planning from the outset. Early threshold analysis, accurate fee calculations, comprehensive filing documentation and well-drafted SPA conditionality clauses are the hallmarks of a smooth clearance process. Deal teams that treat CAK compliance as an afterthought risk penalties, delays and, in worst-case scenarios, the unwinding of completed transactions. For tailored guidance on a specific filing, readers are encouraged to contact a specialist or browse the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for experienced M&A lawyers in Kenya.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Morintat Peter Oiboo, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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