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How insurance is slowly becoming a lifestyle product

Sylvia Kamau by Sylvia Kamau
January 28, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read

In Kenya today, insurance isn’t just something you get because it’s required by law or mandated by a bank. It’s quietly creeping into daily life blending into how people manage health, travel, phones, cars and even farming. Once seen as a distant or compulsory cost, insurance products are now shaping how ordinary Kenyans think about protection and planning for the future.

For decades, insurance in Kenya was something people talked about only when they needed it like covering a car after an accident or buying a small life policy because a bank asked for it. The country’s insurance penetration rate, which measures how much insurance people actually buy, has hovered at 2.2% in H1 2025  having a 0.2% decline from 2.4% in H1 2024, far below the global average of 7.7%. This shows that most people still don’t see insurance as part of everyday life.

But things are shifting. The industry is growing steadily and innovating with products that feel less like traditional policies and more like everyday essentials. According to Cytonn’s reports, Kenya’s general insurance  business contributed 53.8% of the industry’s premium income in H1’2025 compared to 45.7% contribution by long term insurance business in the same period.

One big driver of this change is digital technology. Most insurers now let you buy, renew and submit claims through mobile apps or online platforms without ever stepping into an office. This digital shift makes insurance feel more convenient and less intimidating, especially for younger and tech-savvy customers. Some mobile platforms even embed insurance into services people already use for example, device insurance bundled with mobile wallets or ride-hail apps automatically adding coverage for drivers.

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Another trend helping insurance become a lifestyle choice is bancassurance that is insurance sold through banks. In Kenya, premiums collected through banks grew from KES 19.5 billion in 2019 to KES 35.0 billion in 2023, showing how people see insurance as a natural add-on to their banking services. You don’t just save or invest with your bank anymore you protect with them too.

And it’s not just policies for cars and houses. Products are branching into areas that resonate with modern living: comprehensive motor plans that are cashless and paperless, health cover that links with digital health records, climate risk products for farmers and even flexible lifestyle packages for travel or gadget protection. People are starting to see insurance not as a safety net for rare disasters, but as part of everyday financial habits.

There’s still a long way to go before insurance becomes truly mainstream across all income groups. Penetration remains low and many Kenyans still don’t fully understand how these products work. But with technology making insurance easier to access and design and creativity making products more relevant to daily life, insurance in Kenya is slowly transforming from a technical requirement to a practical lifestyle choice. (start your investment journey today with the cytonn money market fund. Call + 254 (0)709101200 or email sales@cytonn.com)

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Sylvia Kamau

Sylvia Kamau

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