Monday, July 7, 2025

List Of Companies That Have Exited Kenya & Billions lost In Taxes From 2022-25

Corporate Exits in Kenya (2022–2025) – Economic Analysis

Corporate Exits in Kenya (2022–2025)

By Peter M. Mutiti | Investigative Economic Analysis

Introduction

Between 2022 and 2025, Kenya experienced a wave of corporate exits, downsizing, and dissolutions across key sectors. This article investigates the companies that exited, their ownership, economic footprint, and the broader implications for Kenya’s GDP, tax revenue, and employment landscape.

“When corporations shutter their operations, they take capital and the promise of employment for thousands of Kenyans.” — Tuko.co.ke

Table of Contents

Kenya’s Corporate Exodus: 2022–2025

Between 2022 and 2025, Kenya saw an unprecedented wave of company exits and dissolutions—driven by operational challenges, policy shifts, and global realignments. From multinationals to local firms, over 300 businesses either scaled back, relocated, or shut down operations entirely. Use the searchable menu below to explore the names behind the numbers.

List of Companies That Exited Kenya (2022–2025)

This table summarizes key companies that exited Kenya between 2022 and 2025, including their ownership, sector, employee impact, GDP/tax contribution, and reasons for exit.

Company Ownership Sector Employees Affected GDP Contribution (Est.) Tax Contribution (Est.) Reason for Exit Relocation
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) UK Pharmaceuticals 300 KSh 1.2B KSh 250M Shift to distributor model South Africa
Procter & Gamble USA Consumer Goods 30 KSh 450M KSh 90M Currency instability, high costs Import-only model
Base Titanium Australia Mining 1,746 KSh 11.3B KSh 1.1B Ore depletion Madagascar
De La Rue UK Currency Printing 250 KSh 800M KSh 160M Tax audit dispute, low demand Suspended ops
Foschini Group South Africa Fashion Retail 150 KSh 300M KSh 60M Low sales, liquidation Exited Africa
Eveready East Africa Kenya Manufacturing 500 KSh 600M KSh 120M Factory closure Restructuring
Sendy Kenya Tech/Logistics 250 KSh 200M KSh 40M Funding loss Shutdown
Builders Warehouse South Africa Retail 100 KSh 180M KSh 36M Import challenges Exited Kenya
Colgate-Palmolive USA Consumer Goods 200 KSh 500M KSh 100M Factory closure Egypt
Mobius Motors Kenya Automotive 300 KSh 350M KSh 70M Liquidation Shutdown
Total Estimated GDP Loss: KSh 16.98 billion
Total Estimated Tax Loss: KSh 3.03 billion
Total Employees Affected: 3,856

Interactive Charts: Corporate Exit Impact

Explore the economic footprint of company exits in Kenya through dynamic visualizations.

Job Losses by Sector

Foreign Company Origins

Sector Breakdown

Relocation Destinations & Companies at Risk

As multinationals exit Kenya, many have relocated to countries with more favorable business environments. This section outlines where they moved and highlights firms currently at risk of leaving.

Relocation Destinations

Company Relocation Country Reason for Relocation
Base Titanium Madagascar Ore depletion in Kwale
GlaxoSmithKline South Africa Distributor-led model
Colgate-Palmolive Egypt Lower production costs
Cadbury Egypt Supply chain efficiency
Nestlé Uganda/Tanzania Regulatory ease
Procter & Gamble Import-only model Currency instability

Companies at Risk of Exit (2025)

  • Bayer AG – Outsourcing distribution due to high energy costs
  • CMC Motors – Already winding down operations
  • KK Security (GardaWorld) – Laid off 1,000+ staff amid restructuring
  • Posta Kenya – Seeking strategic partner, 600 layoffs planned
  • Technical University of Kenya – Budgeted layoffs of 559 staff
  • Radio Africa Group – Internal restructuring, 27 layoffs
  • OLA Energy – Redundancy program due to poor sales
Key Risk Factors:
  • 📉 High taxation under Finance Act 2023 & 2024
  • 💡 Rising energy and logistics costs
  • 💰 Currency depreciation (KES vs USD)
  • 📋 Regulatory unpredictability
  • 🛑 Weak consumer demand and inflation

1 comment:

  1. From reading your precise well writ piece, clearly, measures are required that will halt this retrogressive trend taking place in Kenya On the tax front, it is obviously, extremely counter productive to increase taxes when the obvious effect slowdowns, shutdowns or even exits by investors, be they foreign or local! THINK KENYA & THINK AGAIN!

    ReplyDelete

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