A system that grew quietly
Mobile money did not arrive with noise or ceremony. It settled into daily life and slowly reshaped how money moves across Kenya. What began as a transfer tool has grown into the country’s financial backbone. Today, it handles trillions of shillings and connects millions to formal finance.
For many Kenyans, mobile money is not a convenience. It is the primary way they save, spend, and transact.
This reality has pushed policymakers to ask a hard question: what happens if the system faces a shock?
Why insurance is now on the table
The Kenya Deposit Insurance Corporation (KDIC), working with the Central Bank of Kenya and mobile money operators, is exploring insurance for mobile money deposits. The aim is simple. Protect users if a bank holding mobile money funds collapses.
Mobile money funds sit in trust accounts at commercial banks. Regulators oversee these accounts, and operators keep them separate from business funds. However, users are not insured individually. Deposit insurance currently covers up to Sh500,000 per bank account, not per mobile money user.
Because funds are pooled, coverage would fall far short of the total deposits.
Scale has changed the risk
Mobile money now reaches over 82 per cent of the population. Registered accounts have grown from just over one million in 2007 to more than 89 million today. Transaction values hit Sh8.69 trillion in 2024.
This growth changed the stakes.
What once looked like a low-risk system now carries national weight. Mobile money no longer sits on the edges of finance. It sits at the centre.
KDIC has warned that excluding mobile money users from deposit insurance leaves many exposed. Trust alone can no longer carry the system.
Confidence is not the same as protection
Mobile money operators say risk remains low. They point to the use of strong banks and government securities. That comfort has held so far.
But financial systems do not fail when times are calm. They fail under stress.
Insurance does not signal panic. It signals preparation.
Extending protection would align regulation with reality. It would recognise that electronic money now plays the role banks once held alone.
A test of financial maturity
Kenya built its global reputation on practical financial innovation. Growth has always moved alongside oversight. Insurance for mobile money would follow that same path.
The debate is not about fear. It is about responsibility.
As mobile money continues to grow, protection must grow with it. The decision before policymakers will show whether financial inclusion ends at access — or extends to safety as well.
















