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Home Pensions

The Role of Micro-Pensions Plans in Kenya

Faith Ndunda by Faith Ndunda
October 3, 2025
in Pensions
Reading Time: 2 mins read

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Kenya’s informal sector is the engine of its economy, employing over 80.0% of the workforce. Yet despite its scale and significance, this segment remains largely excluded from formal retirement planning. Traditional pension schemes are designed for salaried employees with predictable incomes and employer contributions, structures that simply don’t reflect the realities of market traders, boda boda riders, domestic workers, and gig professionals. For these individuals, retirement planning has long felt inaccessible, irrelevant, or unaffordable.
Micro-pensions offer a transformative solution. These are low-cost, flexible retirement savings plans tailored to the needs of informal workers. Unlike conventional schemes, micro-pensions allow contributors to save small amounts at irregular intervals, often through mobile money platforms like M-Pesa. There are no minimum income requirements, no employer sponsorships, and no rigid monthly obligations. Instead, contributors decide when and how much to save, making the system adaptable to fluctuating cash flows and seasonal earnings.
A leading example is the Mbao Pension Plan, launched in 2011 through a partnership between the Retirement Benefits Authority and the National Federation of Jua Kali Associations. The name “Mbao,” meaning “twenty” in Kiswahili, reflects the plan’s minimum daily contribution of KES 20.0. Registration is simple, requiring only a mobile phone and a one-time fee of KES 100.0. Members can contribute via M-Pesa and access life and disability cover alongside their retirement savings. The plan has gained traction among artisans, traders, and micro-entrepreneurs who previously had no viable path to retirement security.
Despite its success, the micro-pension model faces challenges. Financial literacy remains a barrier, as many contributors lack understanding of compound interest, fund management, or retirement timelines. Trust in financial institutions is also fragile, especially among populations that have experienced fraud or poor service. To scale micro-pensions sustainably, providers must invest in education, transparency, and user-friendly digital platforms. Regulators must ensure robust oversight while supporting innovation.
Micro-pensions are more than financial products, they are instruments of empowerment. They offer dignity, independence, and long-term security to workers who have been historically excluded. As Kenya continues to pursue financial inclusion and social protection, micro-pensions like Mbao represent a bold step toward a retirement system that serves everyone, not just the formally employed.
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Faith Ndunda

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