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Kenyan Tenants Have the Right to Refuse Sudden Rent Increases. Most Don’t Know It

Across Kenya’s urban centres, a familiar scene plays out with troubling regularity: a landlord slips a notice under the door announcing a rent hike effective immediately, or simply cuts off the water supply until overdue payments are settled. For most tenants, the instinct is to comply or leave. Few realise they have a powerful legal remedy — one that can land a landlord in jail.

Flats in Huruma in this photo taken on May 14, 2016. Rent for houses spared for demolitions in the area has hiked by 50-70 percent making hard for low income earners able to afford to pay their rent. This comes after most of inhabitable houses are set for demolitions by the government. Photo | Jeff Angote | Nairobi

Legal experts are now urging tenants to familiarise themselves with the Rent Restriction Act, a statute that squarely regulates the relationship between landlords and tenants, and which grants renters far-reaching protections that remain largely unknown to the people they are designed to protect.

The Tribunal Most Tenants Have Never Heard Of

At the heart of Kenya’s tenant protection framework sits the Rent Restriction Tribunal — a quasi-judicial body that must, by law, be consulted before a landlord can raise rents, disconnect utilities, or initiate eviction proceedings.

Prominent Nairobi lawyer Danstan Omari has been vocal in educating the public about these rights.

“Before a landlord increases rent, they must seek approval from the Rent Restriction Tribunal,” Omari explained. “The law is settled. If your landlord wants to increase rent, they must go to the tribunal to seek an assessment. The landlord cannot increase rent without the authority of the tribunal.”

The tribunal operates in several towns across the country, including Nairobi, Mombasa, and Nakuru, and handles disputes between landlords and tenants — determining whether proposed rent adjustments, evictions, or other actions are legally justified.

A landlord who raises rent without the tribunal’s authorisation faces a fine of Ksh 4,000, a prison term of up to six months, or both.

Disconnecting Water and Electricity Is Also Illegal

Beyond rent increases, Omari warns that landlords who cut off utilities — water, electricity, or other essential services — to pressure tenants into paying arrears or vacating a property are acting unlawfully.

Under the Act, such actions are classified as harassment and must be authorised by the tribunal before any disconnection can lawfully occur.

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“If the landlord is found to have disconnected these utilities, he will be fined Ksh 2,000 or face imprisonment of between one month and seven months, or both,” Omari noted.

Despite these provisions, rights groups and tenant advocates report that utility disconnections and lock-outs remain common enforcement tactics in high-demand housing markets — particularly in Nairobi’s satellite towns and informal settlements, where the power imbalance between landlords and tenants is most acute.

Evictions Cannot Happen Without Due Process

The law is equally clear on evictions. A landlord cannot remove a tenant — regardless of the circumstances — without first obtaining the tribunal’s consent and serving a formal eviction notice.

“No landlord, except with the prior consent of the tribunal, shall remove anybody from the place they are staying,” Omari stated. These protections extend equally to furnished apartments.

Tenants who have been physically locked out, had doors removed, or been forcibly ejected without a tribunal-sanctioned notice have grounds to seek legal redress — and their landlords could face criminal liability.

Landlords Also Have Obligations

The Rent Restriction Act is not solely a shield for tenants. It also imposes duties on landlords, including the obligation to maintain rental premises in a habitable condition. Failure to carry out necessary repairs can attract legal penalties under the statute.

Why Don’t More Tenants Know Their Rights?

Despite these protections being enshrined in law, awareness remains strikingly low. Housing advocates point to a combination of factors: limited legal literacy in low-income communities, fear of retribution, and the sheer scarcity of affordable housing that makes tenants reluctant to antagonise landlords even when rights violations occur.

What Tenants Should Do

Legal experts advise tenants who face unlawful rent hikes, utility disconnections, or eviction threats to:

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  1. Document everything — keep written records of all communications with the landlord.
  2. Do not simply comply — an unlawful rent increase does not have to be paid.
  3. File a complaint with the nearest Rent Restriction Tribunal — in Nairobi, Mombasa, or Nakuru.
  4. Seek legal counsel — public interest lawyers and civil society organisations can assist with representation.

The law, it turns out, is firmly on the tenant’s side. The challenge now is ensuring that more Kenyans know it.

This article is for informational purposes. Readers facing specific legal disputes are advised to consult a qualified legal practitioner.

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