The National Assembly’s Finance and National Planning Committee has rejected several aggressive tax proposals in the Finance Bill 2026, delivering a substantial setback to President William Ruto’s broader fiscal strategy. This crucial legislative decision effectively removes multiple controversial revenue-raising measures that the executive branch designed to fund Kenya’s record KSh 4.82 trillion budget for the upcoming fiscal year.
Parliamentary committee members broke ranks with the executive to delete or heavily modify key clauses within the contentious tax legislation. According to news reports, the sweeping amendments strip the Kenya Revenue Authority of expanded asset seizure powers and block mandatory stay orders on frozen bank accounts. Lawmakers argued these enforcement powers would hurt local businesses.
The lawmakers successfully protected the green economy by maintaining zero-rated value-added tax status for electric vehicles, solar batteries, and locally assembled smartphones. Furthermore, the committee rejected an executive proposal to include weekends and public holidays when calculating tax objection deadlines, opting to retain the standard weekday timelines to protect taxpayers from administrative penalties.
Considerable friction also emerged over missing provisions, specifically the complete omission of a promised KSh 30,000 pay-as-you-earn tax relief for low-income workers. Lawmakers raised serious concerns regarding a new 30 percent non-resident rental tax and projected price hikes linked to moving used clothing into a tax-exempt status category.
“We must balance the urgent revenue needs of the state with the heavy economic burden currently carried by ordinary citizens,” stated Kimani Kuria, the chairperson of the Finance and National Planning Committee. Kuria emphasized that the legislature would refuse to approve aggressive tax policies that threaten local manufacturing and consumer spending power.
This significant legislative resistance occurs as global financial institutions issue fresh warnings regarding Kenya’s escalating sovereign debt and long-term economic stability. A report by Moody’s Ratings recently cautioned that rigid public expenditures and persistent domestic revenue shortfalls heavily jeopardize the government’s current fiscal consolidation plans. Meanwhile, vocal opposition groups continue to urge parliament to scale down overall spending estimates to prevent a projected KSh 1.1 trillion deficit from burdening citizens.
Despite the sharp political divisions and widespread public outcry across the nation, the adjusted Finance Bill 2026 successfully passed its critical second reading in the National Assembly. Lawmakers will now debate the specific individual amendments during the third reading stage next week before a final vote officially determines if the bill becomes law.



