More pain for employees as new NSSF rates set to come into force

Business
By Brian Ngugi | Jan 27, 2026
National Social Security Fund in Nairobi. The revised rates are anchored in the NSSF Act of 2013 but implemented in phases. [File, Standard]

Millions of salaried workers, already reeling from a raft of enhanced statutory deductions, are bracing for a further squeeze on their take-home pay from February 1, 2026, as a scheduled increase in National Social Security Fund (NSSF) contributions takes effect.

The hike, defended by the President William Ruto government as a critical step toward boosting the country’s national savings and future pension security, translates into immediate financial pain for millions, worsening a cost-of-living crisis and forcing difficult trade-offs between daily survival and long-term security workers, analysts say. 

The revised rates, anchored in the NSSF Act of 2013 but implemented in phases, will see the mandatory monthly contribution for employees jump to a maximum of Sh6,480 from the current Sh4,320. Employers are legally required to match this amount, bringing the total monthly contribution per employee to Sh12,960, or 12 per cent of gross pay.

This shift applies to a significantly expanded earnings band. The new “pensionable wage” ceiling, the portion of salary subject to the 12 per cent contribution, rises sharply to Sh108,000 per month from Sh72,000. The lower limit also increases to Sh9,000 from Sh8,000.

The increase operates through a two-tier system, a structure designed to ensure both a basic pension for all and a higher savings rate for better earners. For Tier I, covering all employees on the first Sh9,000 of pensionable earnings, the employee contribution will be Sh540, matched by the employer. 

The more significant impact, however, comes from Tier II, which applies to earnings between Sh9,001 and Sh108,000. Here, the combined 12 per cent rate will now apply to this vastly enlarged portion of income.

“This isn’t just a marginal adjustment, it’s a substantial expansion of the contributable base,” explained Ian Njoroge, an independent economist. “For a mid-career professional earning Sh150,000 gross, their direct NSSF deduction could nearly double overnight. When layered onto other deductions, the net effect on disposable income is severe.”

Since last year, employees have concurrently shouldered a 1.5 per cent Housing Levy. 

Additionally, the transition from the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) to the Social Health Insurance Fund (SHIF) has shifted health contributions from a largely flat-rate structure to 2.75 per cent of gross annual income a steep rise for middle and higher-income earners.

Analysts say the cumulative effect is a perfect storm on disposable income. According to Isabel Gakuo, an Employment Law Associate at HRFLEEK Services Limited while the long-term benefit of enhanced retirement savings is real, the immediate reality for households is a drastically reduced cash flow.

This she cautioned in a research note could force many households into a precarious cycle of borrowing from high-cost digital lenders just to meet monthly obligations.

Auditor General Nancy Gathungu recently quantified the distress within the public sector, revealing that one in two police and prisons officers, and one in five civil servants, now take home less than one-third of their gross salary after statutory deductions. 

While the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC) has approved new salary adjustments for civil servants effective July 2025, allocating over Sh2 billion in the current financial year, to partially offset the burden, no such blanket relief exists for the private sector.

In the private sector, employees are navigating these reductions with no compensatory raise guaranteed.

The pain is not exclusive to employees. The matched employer contribution means a direct increase in payroll costs, complicating business planning in an already challenging economic environment. 

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