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Company Auctions Cars From Ksh69,000 — Here Is How to Bid Before the March 10 Deadline

A law firm is offloading dozens of vehicles — from budget runabouts to a Ksh1 million farm machine — and the clock is ticking.

Monday, March 2, 2026

A Nairobi-based law firm has issued an urgent call to prospective buyers, warning that all bids for its nationwide vehicle auction must be submitted no later than Tuesday, March 10 — leaving interested Kenyans barely a week to act.

The firm, headquartered at the KMA Centre in Upper Hill, is selling every listed vehicle on a strict “as is, where is” basis. Buyers are encouraged to arrange viewings at storage yards scattered across the country before placing their offers through the online platform eezycars.co.ke.

From Budget Cars to Big-Ticket Machines

The auction spans an extraordinary range of vehicles and price points. On the affordable end, a Toyota Succeed is listed at Ksh69,000 — viewable at Knick Automax in Kitui — while a Toyota Allion goes for Ksh88,000, available for inspection at the Blackbird Yard in Kisumu.

For buyers with deeper pockets, the catalogue reads like a premium motor show. Headline lots include a BMW X6 priced at Ksh4.7 million, alongside a Volkswagen Golf, a Leyland Truck, a Hino FC500 Truck, and the mighty Case IH JXM90 agricultural tractor — the latter crossing the Ksh1 million threshold.

Vehicles in the Ksh100,000–Ksh900,000 bracket offer considerable variety, featuring a Mazda Carol, Nissan March, Volkswagen Passat, Subaru Impreza, Toyota Sienta, and additional Toyota Succeed units, among others.

Viewing locations span the length and breadth of Kenya, including yards in Nyahururu, Bamburi, Malindi, Garissa, Nairobi, Migori, Muranga, and Kisumu.

Thousands of Abandoned Airport Packages Face the Hammer — and One Shipment Alone Fills a House

KRA is preparing to auction unclaimed cargo at JKIA, and the list of forgotten goods will leave you speechless.

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The vehicle auction comes just two days after the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA), through its Customs and Border Control Department, announced plans to auction unclaimed consignments stranded at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA).

In a gazette notice dated February 27, KRA warned that goods not cleared within 30 days will be legally deemed abandoned and disposed of — including through public auction — in accordance with the relevant Act.

The authority has confirmed the sale will proceed on April 1, 2, and 3, 2026, conducted via its official online portal.

What’s Up for Grabs

The forgotten cargo list is nothing short of extraordinary. Among the lots are wooden pallets with a combined volume of 113 cubic metres, deposited as far back as November 27, 2025.

A second consignment — totalling 150 cubic metres — contains industrial equipment including chilled water blowers, fans, electrical gas control panels, stainless steel round bars, cladding, and piping installations.

Also marked for sale are Expanded Polystyrene (EPS) panels, chromadek signs, mesh curtains, rope mouldings, flat aluminium, fasteners, rivets, screws, and even bandages.

Owners of any listed goods have until the 30-day deadline to clear their consignments or risk losing them permanently at auction.

Offers for the vehicle auction must be submitted via eezycars.co.ke before March 10, 2026. The KRA airport auction is scheduled for April 1–3, 2026.

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