East Africa’s two largest economies are tightening the net on landlords as both Kenya and Uganda roll out digital-first rental tax reforms aimed at closing loopholes in one of the region’s hardest-to-monitor sectors — real estate.
Kenya Launches eRITS for Landlords
The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has unveiled the Electronic Rental Income Tax System (eRITS), a new online platform designed to simplify the registration of rental properties and the filing of monthly rental income.
According to KRA, landlords are required to onboard their properties through the eCitizen portal, where they can now manage property details, pay rental taxes, and track compliance with just a few clicks.
Officials say the system is expected to increase visibility, reduce tax evasion, and modernize a sector where over 2.5 million rental units exist in Nairobi alone — yet rental income currently contributes less than 1% of total tax revenue.
Uganda Lowers Tax Rate but Expands Net
Uganda has also moved aggressively to digitize real estate taxation. In August 2025, Parliament amended the Income Tax Act, giving the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) new powers to widen the rental tax base.
Under the new rules, landlords earning more than Shs 2.8 million ($740) per month in rent must pay a flat 12% tax on rental income after allowable deductions. Previously, the rate stood at 30%, but far fewer landlords fell within the tax bracket.
The move is expected to capture thousands of landlords who had long evaded registration, with URA estimating that while 500,000 units exist nationwide, only about 70,000 landlords were registered by mid-2025.
A Regional Shift Towards Digital-First Taxation
Tax analysts say Kenya’s eRITS and Uganda’s digital rental tax portal mark a broader regional trend. Governments facing mounting fiscal pressures are turning to real estate — a sector long considered opaque — to boost revenue collection.
“Digital tools like Kenya’s eRITS or Uganda’s online rental tax platform improve visibility,” noted an East African tax consultant based in Kampala. “But compliance will ultimately depend on whether tax authorities can link landlords to property registries and enforce penalties consistently.”
Why This Matters
Both countries are under pressure to raise revenue ahead of upcoming fiscal cycles:
- Uganda is aiming to raise its tax-to-GDP ratio from 14.3% to above 20% within five years as part of a broader revenue expansion drive before the 2026 elections.
- Kenya, battling rising public debt, is looking to significantly improve domestic revenue collections.
With property owners now firmly in the spotlight, analysts warn that enforcement and landlord resistance could shape how effective these reforms become.
Still, one thing is clear: the era of low-visibility rental income in East Africa is coming to an end.