Kenyan Bank Loan Interest Rates 2026: Which Banks Actually Passed on the CBK Cuts?

11 April 2026

Kenyan Bank Loan Interest Rates 2026: Which Banks Actually Passed on the CBK Cuts?

Kenyan bank loan interest rates 2026 tell a story that every borrower needs to hear. The Central Bank of Kenya has cut its benchmark rate ten consecutive times — from a painful 13% in mid-2024 down to 8.75% today. That is a 4.25 percentage point reduction in under two years. Your loan should be noticeably cheaper by now.

For many Kenyans, it is not.

The reason is simple: not every bank passed those savings to you. Some moved quickly and are now offering rates as low as 10.21%. Others are still charging above 18% — rates that belong in 2023, not 2026. The difference between choosing the right bank and the wrong one on a KES 1 million loan could cost you over KES 100,000 in unnecessary interest.

This guide ranks all 38 CBK-licensed commercial banks from cheapest to most expensive, using official CBK data published in April 2026 — so you can borrow smarter.

Last updated: April 2026 | Reading time: 7 minutes


The Central Bank of Kenya has cut interest rates ten times in a row. Ten. From a punishing 13% in mid-2024 all the way down to 8.75% by February 2026 — a total reduction of 4.25 percentage points in under two years.

You would expect your loan to be significantly cheaper by now. For many Kenyans, it is not.

The Kenya Bankers Association has been direct about this: the benefits of CBK rate cuts are “taking time to fully reach businesses and households.” Translation — banks have been slow to pass on the savings.

But not all of them. Some banks have moved aggressively to offer cheaper credit. Others are still charging rates that would have looked high even two years ago. The difference between the cheapest and most expensive bank in Kenya right now is nearly 9 percentage points — which on a KES 1 million loan over five years translates to hundreds of thousands of shillings in extra interest paid.

Here is the full picture, based on official CBK data published in April 2026 covering all 38 licensed commercial banks.


What the CBK Rate Cut Actually Means for You

Before the rankings, a quick explanation of how this works.

The CBK sets a benchmark rate called the Central Bank Rate (CBR), currently at 8.75%. This is the rate at which the CBK lends to commercial banks. When CBK cuts this rate, it becomes cheaper for banks to borrow money — and in theory, they pass those savings to customers in the form of lower loan rates.

In practice, what you pay depends on the CBR plus a “risk premium” — a margin the bank adds based on your credit risk, their operating costs, and how much profit they want to make. This is called risk-based credit pricing, and the CBK made it mandatory from September 2025.

Your total loan rate = CBR (8.75%) + Bank’s risk premium (K)

The risk premium varies by bank and by borrower. This is why two people with different credit histories walking into the same bank can be quoted different rates — and why rates differ so much between banks.

The average lending rate across all 38 commercial banks as of February 2026 stands at 14.78%. That is down from 15.08% in September 2025 and from a high of over 17% in late 2024. Progress — but still nearly 6 percentage points above the CBR.


The Cheapest Banks for Loans in Kenya 2026

These are the banks offering the lowest average lending rates, according to official CBK data for February 2026.

Tier 1: The Best Rates (Under 13%)

BankLending Rate
Citibank N.A. Kenya10.21%
Standard Chartered Bank Kenya12.07%
Stanbic Bank Kenya12.12%
Habib Bank A.G. Zurich12.80%

Citibank at 10.21% is in a league of its own — nearly 4.6 percentage points below the industry average. However, Citibank in Kenya is primarily a corporate and high-net-worth bank. Getting a personal loan there as an ordinary Kenyan is not straightforward.

Standard Chartered and Stanbic are more accessible to individual customers and both offer rates well below the industry average. If you are in the market for a personal loan, mortgage, or business loan, these two should be your first calls.

Tier 2: Competitive Rates (13%–14%)

BankLending Rate
Guardian Bank13.51%
ABSA Bank Kenya13.79%
Bank of Baroda Kenya13.87%
Prime Bank13.97%
Consolidated Bank of Kenya13.99%
Paramount Bank14.00%
Gulf African Bank14.15%
Bank of India14.28%
Victoria Commercial Bank14.34%
Diamond Trust Bank (DTB) Kenya14.45%
Premier Bank Kenya14.69%
I&M Bank Kenya14.82%
M-Oriental Bank14.97%

ABSA and DTB stand out here as widely accessible banks with branch networks across the country. Both are offering rates meaningfully below the industry average of 14.78%, which is worth noting if you bank with either.

Gulf African Bank at 14.15% is worth mentioning for Kenyans who prefer Islamic banking products — it is one of Kenya’s Sharia-compliant banks and its rate is competitive by any measure.


The Big Banks: Where KCB, Equity, and Co-op Stand

These are the banks most Kenyans actually use for everyday banking. Here is where they sit on the rate table — and it is not flattering.

BankLending Ratevs. Industry Average
Equity Bank Kenya14.98%+0.20% above average
KCB Bank Kenya15.17%+0.39% above average
Kingdom Bank15.19%+0.41% above average
NCBA Bank Kenya15.42%+0.64% above average
Co-operative Bank of Kenya15.45%+0.67% above average
National Bank of Kenya15.64%+0.86% above average
Family Bank15.98%+1.20% above average

Every single one of Kenya’s biggest retail banks is charging above the industry average. Equity, KCB, Co-op, NCBA — the banks where millions of Kenyans have their salaries paid, their M-Pesa linked, their savings sitting — are all above average on loan pricing.

This does not mean they are bad banks. Their rates have come down from the highs of 2024. But it does mean that if you are a loyal customer of one of these banks and you have not shopped around for a loan, you are almost certainly paying more than you need to.


The Most Expensive Banks for Loans in Kenya 2026

These banks are charging the highest rates — some alarmingly so given how much the CBK has cut.

BankLending Rate
Ecobank Kenya15.22%
Guaranty Trust Bank (K)15.26%
African Banking Corporation15.36%
CIB Kenya15.43%
UBA Kenya Bank15.50%
Sidian Bank15.88%
Family Bank15.98%
DIB Bank Kenya16.40%
Middle East Bank Kenya16.44%
Development Bank of Kenya16.49%
HFC Limited17.39%
SBM Bank Kenya17.71%
Bank of Africa Kenya18.20%
Credit Bank18.41%
Access Bank Kenya19.05%

Access Bank Kenya at 19.05% is the most expensive bank in Kenya for loans — charging more than double what Citibank charges, and more than 10 percentage points above the CBR. If you have a loan with Access Bank, this is the time to check whether refinancing elsewhere makes financial sense.

HFC Limited at 17.39% deserves special mention because it is primarily a mortgage lender. Kenyans taking home loans through HFC are paying some of the highest rates in the market at a time when rates are supposedly falling.


What This Means If You Have an Existing Loan

If your loan was taken before September 2025 and is a variable-rate Kenyan shilling loan, it should have been migrated to the new CBR-based pricing model by February 2026, as mandated by the CBK.

This means your rate should have adjusted downward automatically. If you have not seen your monthly repayments change or received a notice from your bank about rate adjustment, contact your bank and ask specifically about your loan’s repricing status under the Risk-Based Credit Pricing Model.

Banks are legally required to give 30 days’ notice before adjusting rates. If you received no notice and your rate did not change, that is worth raising with the CBK directly.


The Practical Checklist: How to Get a Better Rate

1. Get your CRB status clean first. Your Credit Reference Bureau (CRB) report directly affects your risk premium. Before applying for any loan, get your free annual CRB report from Metropol, TransUnion, or Creditinfo. Dispute any errors. If you have a CRB flag for a past default, pay it off and get a clearance certificate before applying.

2. Negotiate — banks expect it. The rates published by CBK are averages. Your individual rate is negotiable, especially if you have a salary account, a good repayment history, or significant savings with the bank. Always ask what rate they can offer a “valued customer.”

3. Shop across at least three banks before signing. The 9-percentage-point gap between the cheapest and most expensive bank is not theoretical — it represents real money. Get quotes from at least three banks before committing. On a KES 500,000 loan over three years, the difference between 12% and 19% is over KES 60,000 in extra interest.

4. Consider SACCOs. SACCOs are not in this CBK data but many offer rates of 12%–14% on loans, often with more flexible terms than commercial banks. If you are a member of a SACCO, compare their loan rate against the market before going to a bank.

5. If you already have a loan, ask about refinancing. If your current bank is in the expensive tier and your credit history is clean, it may be worth refinancing your loan with a cheaper bank. Calculate the break-even point (new bank’s fees vs. interest savings) before making the move.


The Bottom Line

Ten CBK rate cuts later, the Kenyan banking sector is moving — just not at the same speed everywhere. The gap between the best and worst rates in the market is wide enough that where you borrow matters enormously.

The good news is that for the first time, the CBK is publishing this data transparently and regularly. You now have every tool you need to walk into a loan negotiation informed. Use it.


Data source: Central Bank of Kenya, Commercial Banks Weighted Average Lending and Deposit Rates, February 2026, published April 7, 2026. Rates reflect bank averages and individual rates may vary based on borrower risk profile. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Always get a personalised quote from your bank before making borrowing decisions.

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