
Role of a Nominee Director in Kenya Company Registration
Role of a Nominee Director in Kenya Company Registration (2025 Guide)
Protecting Foreign Investors’ Interests — Powered by WKA Advocates
Kenya, East Africa’s leading investment hub, continues to attract foreign investors across vibrant sectors such as agribusiness, gold trading, construction, energy, and manufacturing. As international entrepreneurs seek to establish presence under the Companies Act, 2015, appointing a nominee director in Kenya becomes a vital step for compliance and protection during company registration in Kenya for foreigners.
A nominee or resident director bridges the regulatory requirement for Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) compliance, corporate KRA PIN registration, and bank account opening, while ensuring that foreign shareholders retain full ownership and control. Partnering with WKA Advocates — a top-tier Kenyan law firm specializing in foreign company formation, resident director services, tax compliance, and licensing — guarantees a compliant, confidential, and secure incorporation process.
Why a Nominee Director is Essential for Foreign Investors
Under the Companies Act, 2015, foreigners can own 100% of shares in a Private Limited Company (PLC). However, obtaining a corporate KRA PIN requires linkage to an individual KRA PIN belonging to at least one director.
When all directors are non-residents, this creates a temporary compliance gap.
That’s where a nominee director in Kenya becomes indispensable — enabling smooth incorporation while preserving foreign investor protection.
The Nominee Director Enables:
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Regulatory Compliance: Satisfies KRA’s requirement for director PIN linkage on the iTax portal.
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Zero-Equity Appointment: The nominee holds no shares or voting rights, ensuring investor control.
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Temporary Representation: Removed immediately after corporate KRA PIN issuance.
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Investor Protection: Bound by a Nominee Director Agreement and Shareholder’s Agreement to prevent unauthorized action.
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Sector Flexibility: Applicable across sectors — gold dealing, agribusiness, private construction, and plant or manufacturing companies.
WKA Advocates offers secure, transparent nominee and resident director services — ensuring compliance without sacrificing ownership integrity.
Step 1: Understanding the Nominee Director’s Role in Company Formation
When registering a foreign-owned company in Kenya, at least one director with a valid Individual KRA PIN must be listed for corporate KRA PIN activation.
The nominee director fulfills this compliance role during registration via the Business Registration Service (BRS) portal on eCitizen.
Key Company Formation Requirements
Requirement | Description | WKA Advocates Assistance |
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Proposed Company Name | 3 unique options submitted via eCitizen | Pre-search and approval coordination |
Director/Shareholder Details | Name, nationality, contact, passport | Data validation and documentation |
Identification Documents | Notarized passports + photos | Document notarization and upload |
Registered Office Address | Must be a Kenyan address | WKA provides compliant local address |
Statement of Nominal Capital | Declares share capital | Stamp duty calculation and filing |
Beneficial Ownership (BOF1) | Lists controllers (≥10%) | Transparency compliance per BRS rules |
Memorandum & Articles (CR1, CR2, CR8) | Defines company purpose and governance | Custom drafting by WKA Advocates |
Processing Time: 3–7 working days (BRS approval)
Post-registration setup: ~1–2 months (banking, licensing, KRA PIN)
Step 2: Facilitating KRA PIN Applications through the Nominee Director
The corporate KRA PIN — issued by the Kenya Revenue Authority — is essential for tax registration, bank account opening, and business permits.
KRA PIN Application Workflow (Managed by WKA Advocates)
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Individual Director KRA PIN:
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For non-resident directors, WKA applies for non-resident PINs (passport, incorporation proof).
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If using a nominee, their existing KRA PIN is used for corporate linkage.
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Corporate KRA PIN:
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Registered under “Non-Individual” on the iTax platform.
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Requires company name, incorporation number, and registered office address.
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Tax Obligations Setup:
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Activation of Corporate Income Tax (30%), VAT (16%), and PAYE accounts.
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Director Linkage:
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The company’s profile is linked to the nominee’s PIN for compliance.
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Issuance & Validation:
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KRA issues the Corporate PIN Certificate — enabling corporate banking, licenses, and customs registration.
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Timeline: 5–10 business days post-incorporation.
Banking Partners Supported: KCB, Equity Bank, Standard Chartered, NCBA, Absa Kenya.
Step 3: Post-Registration Compliance and Operations
Once the company is incorporated and KRA-compliant, WKA Advocates manages operational setup to ensure smooth onboarding.
1. Opening a Corporate Bank Account
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Documents Needed: Certificate of Incorporation, KRA PIN, CR12, director IDs, and proof of address.
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Benefits: Multi-currency accounts (KES/USD/EUR/GBP), online banking, M-Pesa Business integration, forex and trade finance.
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Timeline: 3–10 days.
2. Licensing & Regulatory Approvals
Sector | Licensing Authority | Key Licenses |
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Agribusiness | AFA, NEMA | Crop & processing permits, EIA |
Gold Dealing | Ministry of Mining | Mineral Dealer’s License, export permits |
Construction/Plant | County Works Department | Building & operational permits |
3. Statutory Registrations
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Work Permits (Class G – Investors, Class D – Employees)
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Beneficial Ownership updates (BOF1) to Registrar of Companies
WKA Advocates handles full post-registration compliance — including tax filings, banking coordination, and annual return submissions.
Step 4: Protecting Foreign Investor Interests
The nominee director serves solely as a compliance facilitator, not a decision-maker. To guarantee corporate security, WKA Advocates establishes layered legal protection:
Legal Safeguards
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Nominee Director Agreement (Kenya): Restricts authority to administrative duties only.
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Shareholder’s Agreement (Kenya): Defines voting rights, capital distribution, dispute resolution, and nominee removal clauses.
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Custom Articles of Association: Tailored clauses on nominee removal and officer substitution.
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CR12 Updates: Registrar filings post-removal to reflect true board composition.
Why This Matters
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Prevents unauthorized actions or bank access.
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Maintains clear foreign control and beneficial ownership visibility.
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Ensures transparent, auditable governance for international investors.
Why Choose WKA Advocates?
WKA Advocates is Kenya’s trusted partner for foreign company registration, delivering specialized legal support for:
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Company incorporation (PLC) via BRS/eCitizen
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Nominee director & resident contact services
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Corporate KRA PIN & tax compliance
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Custom Shareholder’s Agreements & Articles of Association
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Corporate bank account opening & work permit facilitation
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Sector licensing: AFA, NEMA, Ministry of Mining, and county approvals
Start your Kenyan investment journey today — Contact WKA Advocates to structure your company formation, secure KRA PINs, and implement a robust nominee director solution that ensures compliance and protection.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. What is a nominee director in Kenya?
A nominee director is a temporary, compliance-based representative appointed to satisfy Kenya’s legal and KRA registration requirements. They hold no shares or control.
2. Why do foreign investors need a nominee director?
Foreign-owned companies require at least one resident director linked to a KRA PIN for registration. A nominee fulfills this role temporarily without affecting ownership.
3. Does the nominee director have access to the company’s funds or decisions?
No. The nominee’s powers are restricted through a legally binding Nominee Director Agreement and the company’s Articles of Association.
4. Can the nominee director be removed after registration?
Yes. Once the corporate KRA PIN is issued, WKA Advocates files an update (CR12) to remove the nominee and register the permanent board.
5. Is the nominee director service legal?
Absolutely. It’s recognized under the Companies Act (2015) and widely used globally for compliance purposes.
6. How long does company registration take with WKA Advocates?
Typically 5–10 working days for incorporation, followed by 1–2 weeks for KRA PIN and banking setup.
7. What documents are required from foreign investors?
Notarized passports, shareholder details, KRA PINs (or non-resident applications), and registered office address details.
8. Does Kenya allow full foreign ownership?
Yes, in most sectors except for regulated areas (e.g., defense, media). WKA Advocates advises on structuring restricted sectors.
9. Can foreigners open corporate bank accounts remotely?
Yes. Major banks like KCB, Equity, Absa, and Standard Chartered allow remote onboarding with power of attorney.
10. What happens if the nominee misuses their position?
WKA’s agreements include indemnity and immediate removal provisions, protecting the investor’s interests under Kenyan law.