Kenya emerges as Africa's top investment hub
Opinion
By
John Mwendwa
| Mar 19, 2026
President Ruto addresses delegates during the Kilifi County International Investment Conference (KCIIC) at Vipingo Ridge in Kilifi County. [File, Standard]
As Kenya prepares to host the Kenya International Investment Conference (KIICO 2026), this offers a timely opportunity to reflect on the country’s trajectory in an increasingly competitive global investment landscape.
Today’s investment environment is defined by complexity. Shifting supply chains, geopolitical tensions, and climate-related disruptions are reshaping how capital is allocated. Investors are no longer guided solely by where growth is fastest; they are asking where growth is bankable, resilient, and sustainable.
In this context, the most competitive markets are those with clear policy direction, credible institutions, and a strong pipeline of investable opportunities. Equally important is the ability to move efficiently from investment decision to execution. Kenya is increasingly meeting this standard.
A key differentiator has been the country’s focus on improving the end-to-end investment experience. Across many markets, investors encounter fragmented processes, duplicated approvals, and delays that undermine confidence. Kenya is addressing these constraints by strengthening coordination and accountability across government agencies.
READ MORE
Questionable SGR: Inside William Ruto's most expensive project
Ketraco gets nod to reappoint board after petition struck out
Kenya targets 240,000 youth jobs in fisheries sector expansion
Kenya's insurance industry faces its claims moment
Co-op Bank posts Sh29.75b profit, proposes a record Sh14.67 billion dividend
MPs push KenGen to upgrade its power generation technology
Mwangi's Sh734m windfall as Equity posts record earnings
MoUs without jobs? Kenya's seafarer strategy under scrutiny
Why World Bank has banned PwC Kenya for 21 months
Property sector reaps big from rising demand for luxury healthcare
The introduction of an investment deal room model marks a significant step forward. By bringing together key institutions to resolve bottlenecks in real time, the model accelerates decision-making and keeps projects on track. This shift reflects a broader recognition that competitiveness is not only about attracting investors but about delivering efficiently once they commit.
This progress is reinforced by ongoing reforms to the business environment through modernising its legal and regulatory framework to align with the needs of a dynamic global economy. The Business Laws (Amendment) Bill 2025 signals a new phase of pro-business reform, aimed at enhancing predictability, strengthening investor protections, and ensuring fair and consistent enforcement.
For investors, such frameworks are essential in building long-term confidence.
At the same time, Kenya is advancing digital transformation across the investment lifecycle. The upcoming Digital One Stop Centre, expected to be fully operational in 2026, will streamline approvals and investor services. Integration with the Kenya Revenue Authority has already been completed, while linkages with the Business Registration Service, the National Environment Management Authority, and Immigration are underway, with counties expected to follow.
Faster approvals and clearer processes reduce costs, shorten project timelines, and improve predictability factors that are especially critical in sectors where speed to market determines competitiveness. Beyond process efficiency, Kenya is also addressing a longstanding challenge in emerging markets: the shortage of investment-ready projects. Too often, viable opportunities fail to attract financing because they are not sufficiently prepared or packaged to meet investor requirements.
To bridge this gap, Kenya has developed sector-specific investment propositions in areas such as leather, textiles and apparel, business process outsourcing, and e-mobility. Additional sector packs and a national investment projects catalogue are in progress. These initiatives provide investors with clearer entry points, reduce due diligence timelines, and signal priority sectors where Kenya has a competitive edge.
Complementing this effort is the establishment of a Project Preparation Facility to support feasibility studies and early-stage project development. Strong project preparation enhances bankability, reduces risk, and increases the likelihood of projects reaching financial close and implementation.
In Today’s investment climate, attractiveness alone is not sufficient. Investors must be confident that risks are well understood, appropriately priced, and effectively mitigated. Kenya is strengthening the ecosystem around investment delivery by advancing de-risking instruments offered through the private sector. These measures will improve confidence and make it easier for investors to commit capital.
The impact of these reforms is already visible. The impact of turnaround is already bearing fruit. Investments facilitated rose from $1.5 billion (Sh194 billion) in 2024, according to UNCTAD, to $1.8 billion in 2025 (Invest Kenya estimates, excluding mergers and acquisitions and substantial re-investments). This demonstrates a market that is not only attracting investor interest but is increasingly converting that interest into executed transactions.
As KIICO 2026 convenes investors, policymakers, and business leaders from around the world can be assured that Kenya’s competitive advantage is not anchored in a single reform or sector. It is the result of consistent, system-wide improvements across the entire investment cycle from policy and facilitation to project preparation and execution.
The writer is CEO, Invest Kenya