The Finance Bill 2026 reveals a government under fiscal pressure but operating within tighter political constraints. Unlike previous finance bills that relied on introducing highly visible taxes, the 2026 proposals focus on accelerating compliance, expanding the tax base, and reducing leakages within the existing system.
One of the most consequential proposals is the reduction of the income tax filing timeline, effectively moving the filing deadline from 30th June to 30th April. Nil returns, which currently follow the general filing deadline, would now be required within one month after the end of the year of income, effectively by 31 January for most taxpayers. The shorter filing period compresses the entire tax compliance cycle, bringing forward tax assessment, reconciliation, and payment obligations.
The Bill also introduces a new tax amnesty framework covering penalties and interest on liabilities relating to periods up to 31st December 2025, with the amnesty expiring on 31st December 2026. Taxpayers who settle outstanding principal tax within the prescribed period may qualify for waiver of penalties and interest. Treasury is effectively attempting to clean up legacy tax arrears before transitioning into a more enforcement-intensive system.
The Bill further proposes that taxable profit on mitumba imports be deemed at 5.0% of customs value, creating an effective tax of 1.5% collected upfront at importation. This shifts taxation away from declared profitability toward transaction-based assessment in sectors where income verification is difficult. While the approach simplifies collection, it may also create cash flow strain because tax becomes payable regardless of whether inventory has been sold.
The Bill further expands withholding taxation. Proposed withholding taxes on betting winnings, scrap metal transactions, interchange fees, merchant service fees, and payments to card companies move revenue collection closer to the transaction itself. Notably, the Bill proposes reintroducing a 20.0% withholding tax on betting winnings.
Cross-border and digital income also receive increased attention. The Bill introduces a more structured framework for taxing non-resident rental income derived from Kenyan property and expands reporting obligations around digital and virtual asset activity. These provisions reflect Treasury’s attempt to capture economic activity that increasingly operates beyond traditional tax administration channels.
Another important but less discussed proposal is the tightening of deemed dividend rules. The Bill proposes that where a company fails to distribute profits within twelve months after the financial year, at least 60.0% of undistributed profits may be treated as dividends if the Commissioner determines the company could have distributed them without harming operations. This directly targets closely held companies that retain earnings for extended periods, potentially to defer withholding tax on dividend distributions.
Taken together, the provisions reveal a consistent pattern. The Finance Bill 2026 is restructuring Kenya’s tax administration around earlier detection, accelerated collection, and reduced reliance on voluntary declaration. The government appears to have recognized the political limits of introducing highly visible new taxes after recent public resistance to aggressive fiscal measures. As a result, the strategy has shifted toward increasing effective taxation through timing, enforcement, and coverage rather than headline rate increases.
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