KRA Cracks the Whip: Eastleigh Traders Must Switch to E-Receipts by May 1

The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has issued a firm May 1, 2026, deadline for traders in Nairobi’s Eastleigh business hub to begin issuing electronic tax receipts (ETRs) or face severe penalties. This directive, announced during a high-level consultative meeting with the Eastleigh Business District Association (EBDA) on Monday, April 13, aims to close a massive “compliance gap” in one of East Africa’s most active commercial centers

The taxman has flagged the widespread use of cash transactions and the failure to issue eTIMS-compliant invoices as a primary hurdle for businesses nationwide that source goods from Eastleigh. Without these electronic records, thousands of legitimate businesses are unable to claim tax-deductible expenses, effectively inflating their taxable income

Planned Enforcement MeasuresOn-Ground Support: KRA will deploy officers proficient in local languages within Eastleigh to assist with PIN registration, tax filing, and eTIMS onboarding.Service Desks: To improve accessibility, the authority plans to establish permanent service desks within various shopping malls in the district.Automated Validation: Starting May 2026, KRA will intensify its real-time monitoring, using data from eTIMS and M-Pesa business records to cross-reference declared sales

Eastleigh is a hub for businesses across Africa, but you cannot do business without paying tax,” stated EBDA Secretary General Omar Hussein. “The KRA has given us a timeline until May 1 to start complying, and we must address the language and procedure barriers that have hindered us in the past

The crackdown aligns with KRA’s broader strategy to validate all 2025 tax returns against electronic datasets, a policy that will strictly reject any undocumented costs for the current financial year

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *