Buying land in Kenya from abroad is entirely possible. The Constitution gives every Kenyan the right to own land anywhere in the country regardless of residence. But the remote nature of the purchase creates specific risks that local buyers don’t face to the same degree — primarily the inability to physically verify what you’re buying before money changes hands.
This guide walks through the process step by step, including the parts most estate agents would prefer not to dwell on. If you’re in the UK, US, Canada, Dubai, or Australia and looking at land near Nairobi, this covers what you actually need to know.
Section 40 of the Constitution of Kenya states that every person has the right to acquire and own property. The National Land Policy reinforces this for citizens regardless of country of residence. There are restrictions on foreign nationals owning freehold land in Kenya — but those restrictions don’t apply to Kenyan citizens, regardless of where they live. If you hold a Kenyan passport or dual citizenship, you can own land in Kenya on the same terms as someone resident in Nairobi.
Kenya’s land registry now runs on the Ardhisasa platform (ardhisasa.go.ke). You can run an official title search remotely — you need the land reference number or title number. The search confirms the registered owner, whether there are cautions or loans against the title, and the history of transfers. Any seller who hesitates to give you the title number before you pay anything is a red flag.
You need someone you trust — a family member, a friend, a lawyer — to physically visit the land on your behalf. Videos and photos from the seller are not sufficient. The representative should photograph the beacons, check road access, speak to neighbours, and confirm the area matches what was presented. This step is non-negotiable.
Your own advocate — not the seller’s. A licensed advocate will review the title, check for adverse entries at the Land Registry, prepare and review the sale agreement, and handle stamp duty payment and transfer lodging. Advocates charge a regulated fee (roughly 1–1.5% of transaction value) and are regulated by the Law Society of Kenya. This cost is worth it every time.
A power of attorney (POA) allows a trusted person in Kenya to sign documents on your behalf. The POA must be notarised in your country of residence and then authenticated by the Kenyan High Commission or Embassy — a process called apostilling. Your advocate in Kenya can guide you through the exact format required. Without a valid POA, your representative cannot legally sign the sale agreement or transfer documents for you.
All payments should go to the seller’s official business account, confirmed in writing before transfer. Never send money to a personal M-Pesa or personal bank account without written confirmation from an advocate that this is the correct account for the transaction. Keep all payment receipts and transaction records.
Once full payment is made, your advocate lodges the transfer documents at the Land Registry. Stamp duty (2% for agricultural land, 4% for non-agricultural) is paid at this stage. The Land Registry issues the new title in your name — or registers the lease if it’s a leasehold property. The timeline from full payment to title collection is typically 3–6 weeks with an experienced advocate.
We’ve handled purchases from Kenyans in the UK, US, Canada, Dubai, and Australia. The typical process runs like this: initial enquiry by WhatsApp or email, plot shortlist sent with photos and estate information, Ardhisasa search results shared for your review, site visit arranged through a family member or trusted contact, sale agreement sent in advance for your advocate’s review, POA executed and authenticated in your country of residence, signing by your local representative, payment to Migaa’s company account, and lease registration on completion.
One practical note for diaspora buyers: the hardest part is usually finding someone reliable for the site visit. If you genuinely don’t have a trusted person in Nairobi, some Kenyan conveyancing advocates will attend a site visit on your behalf as part of their service. Ask your advocate about this when you first engage them.
The full cost of buying land in Kenya typically includes: stamp duty (2% agricultural, 4% non-agricultural, on the market value), advocate fees (approximately 1–1.5% of transaction value), Land Control Board consent fee (small, usually under KSh 5,000), land rates clearance (varies by county), and any survey or valuation fees if required. At Migaa, the quoted plot price includes title processing and legal fees — the stamp duty is the main additional cost you carry as a buyer.
We’ve handled diaspora purchases from the UK, US, Canada, and Dubai. Email or WhatsApp us to start the conversation.
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