Hiring a car in Kenya as a foreign visitor requires satisfying several documentation and eligibility requirements before any hire company will hand over keys. Kenya’s hire vehicle regulations are governed by the National Transport and Safety Authority (NTSA) and the contractual requirements of the individual hire companies. The rules are not identical across all companies, but the core requirements are consistent: a valid driving licence from your home country, an International Driving Permit (IDP) if your licence is not in English or not issued by a recognised EAC country, a minimum age (typically 23 to 25 years depending on the company and vehicle), and a credit or debit card for the security deposit. This guide covers every documentation requirement for a Kenya self-drive in 2027/2028.

Driving Licence Requirements

  • English-language licence from a Commonwealth country: Accepted directly at most Kenya hire companies without an IDP (UK, Australia, South Africa, India, Canada licences).
  • Non-English licence (German, French, Dutch, etc.): IDP required in addition to the original licence. The IDP must be obtained in your home country before travel — it cannot be issued in Kenya.
  • US licence: Accepted by most major Nairobi hire companies without an IDP, but some companies request one — confirm before booking.
  • EAC licence (Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi): Directly recognised without IDP in Kenya.

International Driving Permit (IDP)

The IDP is a standardised document issued by your national motoring authority (AA in the UK, AAA in the US, ADAC in Germany) that translates your driving licence details into multiple languages. It is valid only alongside your original domestic licence — never alone. In Kenya, the IDP should be the 1949 Geneva Convention format (the older grey booklet type, widely accepted), though the 1968 Vienna Convention IDP is also valid. Issue cost is typically USD 20 to 30 in most countries and the permit is valid for 12 months. Apply through your national motoring association at least 2 weeks before travel.

Minimum Age Rules

  • Standard vehicles (Corolla, Rav4, small 4×4): Minimum age 23 at most Nairobi hire companies
  • Land Cruiser Prado, Land Cruiser 70/76: Minimum age 25 at most companies — some require 2 years’ driving experience in a 4×4 or evidence of off-road driving
  • Maximum age: No standard upper age limit in Kenya hire, but some companies cap at 70 years — confirm with your specific company if relevant

CDW and Insurance in Kenya

Kenya’s Collision Damage Waiver (CDW) typically reduces your liability excess to USD 0 to 1,500 depending on the tier. Most Nairobi hire companies include basic CDW in the daily rate but charge for “Super CDW” (zero excess) as an add-on. What CDW does NOT cover in Kenya hire contracts:

  • Tyre damage (punctures, blowouts, sidewall damage from road hazards)
  • Windscreen chips and cracks
  • Underbody damage (driving into concealed ruts or rocks at speed)
  • Roof damage (overhanging branches in a pop-top vehicle)
  • Theft or fire damage (covered under separate theft/fire waiver — confirm inclusion)

Security Deposit

Kenya hire companies require a security deposit of USD 500 to 2,000 depending on the vehicle. This is held on a credit card pre-authorisation (temporary hold) at pickup and released within 3 to 10 business days after vehicle return in undamaged condition. Debit cards are accepted by some companies but not all — confirm the payment method accepted before travel, as a credit card pre-authorisation is preferable to an actual debit from a debit account. The deposit amount for a Land Cruiser hire is typically USD 1,000 to 1,500.

NTSA Requirements

The Kenyan NTSA (National Transport and Safety Authority) requires hire vehicles to carry specific documentation: the vehicle logbook (equivalent to the V5 in the UK), current road licence sticker (annual vehicle tax), current insurance certificate, and a NTSA inspection certificate. All reputable Kenya hire companies provide these documents in the vehicle. Check that they are present at pickup — the roadside police stop documents check is a standard occurrence on the Mombasa and Nakuru highways, and missing documents result in fines or vehicle impoundment.

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