KRA

KRA reinstates filing of nil returns but with conditions

The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has indicated that it has reinstated the filing of nil returns after a brief suspension in January. Starting April 1, 2026, when Kenyans file their 2025 income tax returns, every nil declaration will pass through sophisticated validation checks designed to expose anyone living beyond their declared means.

The temporary suspension had caused widespread panic among taxpayers, especially those with genuinely zero income. KRA has now clarified that nil filing remains available for 2024 returns and earlier periods without restrictions. The new validation system only kicks in for 2025 returns filed after March 31, 2026.

Recently, KRA discovered 392,162 taxpayers who had taxes withheld from their earnings in 2024 yet declared nil income on their returns. These weren’t people with zero income but rather professionals and contractors who received payments, had tax deducted at the source, and then told KRA they earned nothing.

Commissioner for Micro and Small Taxpayers George Obell explained the common misconception driving this behavior. Many taxpayers believe that withholding tax deducted from their fees (typically 5% for management or professional services and 3% for contractual work) is a final tax. It’s not. It’s an advance payment toward their total tax liability.

KRA’s new weapon now is prepopulated returns. The system will automatically fill in income data from multiple sources before taxpayers even see their forms. If you had 5% withheld from a payment, KRA already knows the total amount you earned. You won’t be able to simply delete that information and file nil.

This data comes from everywhere. The electronic Tax Invoice Management System (eTIMS) captures transactions across the economy, linking suppliers, customers, and transaction values. Withholding tax certificates show what you earned. Customs records reveal imports. Mobile money platforms expose cash flows. Vehicle registration data from the National Transport and Safety Authority shows what you drive.

If your lifestyle doesn’t match your declared income, the system flags you automatically. If you cleared a luxury vehicle through customs while declaring zero income, the algorithm will notice this. If you frequently travel internationally with no reported earnings, that will trigger a review.

“We will also communicate to taxpayers who choose, despite having been shown income on their prepopulated returns, not to come forward and engage the authority. That in itself will be an invitation to look not just at 2025 but also preceding years,” Obell stated about the consequences of ignoring prepopulated income data.

The Income and Expenditure Verification program, which was launched on January 1, 2026, pulls data from multiple sources simultaneously and validates declarations in real time. There’s no grace period for explanations after filing. Mismatches will trigger immediate review.

Upward tax adjustments come with penalties accumulating at 1% monthly interest. More importantly, non-compliant taxpayers risk denial of the Tax Compliance Certificate required for government tenders, bank loans, and various statutory requirements.

The filing deadline remains June 30, 2026, for individual taxpayers. Late filing attracts a penalty of KES 2,000 or 5% of tax due, whichever is higher, and late payment accrues interest at 1% monthly.