Kenya’s Mortgage Market Trends 2023

Kenya’s mortgage market remains bank-led with rising rates. Explore trends, top lenders, loan sizes, and regulatory updates for 2023.

Kenya’s mortgage market remains bank-led with rising rates. Explore trends, top lenders, loan sizes, and regulatory updates for 2023.

🏠 Kenya’s Mortgage Market in 2023: Trends, Rates & Top Lenders

NAIROBI, Kenya – April 2025 — Kenya’s mortgage market remains largely dominated by commercial banks, even as microfinance institutions (MFIs) and savings and credit cooperatives (SACCOs) continue to emerge as alternative lenders.

While diversification is slowly increasing, the sector’s structure remains top-heavy, with nine banks controlling nearly 90% of mortgage lending as of 2023.


🏛️ Mortgage Regulation in Kenya: Who Oversees What?

Lenders must adhere to CBK’s statutory reporting and financial crime compliance. The Bank Supervision Department issues an annual report detailing banking performance and macroeconomic indicators.

📌 Related: CBK’s Annual Banking Sector Report 2023


📊 Mortgage Lending Snapshot (2023)

According to CBK data, 2023 saw modest changes in Kenya’s mortgage landscape:

Metric2023 Value2022 Value
Average Loan SizeKsh 9.4 millionUnchanged
Average Interest Rate14.3%12.3%
Rate Range8.7% – 18.6%9.0% – 15.5%
Average Loan Term11.7 years10.9 years
Loan Tenure Range5 – 18 years5 – 15 years

📌 Explore: Why Kenya’s Mortgage Rates Are Rising


🏦 Leading Mortgage Lenders in Kenya (2023)

Nine banks dominate Kenya’s mortgage portfolio, holding 89.5% of the total value of home loans:

BankMortgage Portfolio
KCB Bank Kenya LtdKsh 88.08B
Stanbic Bank Kenya LtdKsh 34.55B
HFC LtdKsh 24.02B
Standard Chartered Bank KenyaKsh 23.02B
NCBA Bank LtdKsh 21.75B
Absa Bank Kenya LtdKsh 20.54B
Co-operative Bank of Kenya LtdKsh 14.39B
Family Bank LtdKsh 13.05B
Equity Bank Kenya LtdKsh 12.74B

📌 Read more: KCB’s Market Dominance in Real Estate Lending


📈 Affordability Concerns and Rising Rates

The average mortgage interest rate rose from 12.3% in 2022 to 14.3% in 2023, contributing to reduced affordability and slower uptake, especially among middle-income borrowers.

High interest rates—coupled with currency depreciation, inflation, and construction material costs—have pushed home ownership further out of reach for many Kenyans.

📌 Related: Kenya’s Housing Affordability Index 2023


🔮 Outlook: Regulatory Shifts and Lending Trends

While commercial banks remain dominant, the rise of:

…suggests that the future may hold a more diversified lending ecosystem.

Changing macroeconomic conditions and ongoing regulatory reviews by CBK and SASRA could significantly impact mortgage lending behavior in 2024 and beyond.

By Charles Wachira

Charles Wachira, Managing Editor of businessworld, has disproportionately worked as a foreign correspondent in Nairobi, Kenya. Formerly an East Africa correspondent with bloomberg, covering the business beat he has since been published by a legion of other authoritative global news platforms including Global Finance Magazine, Toward Freedom, Earth Island Journal, and Dialogue. earth and so on. He is also a co-author of, Success to Significance, a biography of pre-eminent global industrialist and renowned philanthropist Dr. Manu Chandaraia. He’s an alumnus of the University of Nairobi and Nairobi School.

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