Login

Industry Payment Flow

Renewable Energy Equipment payments
into Kenya.

If you are paying Kenyan suppliers in this sector, the issue is rarely just the transfer itself. You need the beneficiary details, documents, value date, payment proof, and supplier communication to hold together when timing matters.

What usually creates pressure on this flow

Industry pressure

Large project-based payments

  • Large project-based payments
  • Technology obsolescence risk
  • Government subsidy dependencies
  • Long installation timelines

Kenya payment reality

Your payment may need local beneficiary details, a clear purpose of payment, and documents that match the invoice and supplier name. If the receiving bank asks a question after funds are sent, the case becomes a release issue, not a generic transfer.

  • Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) foreign exchange regulations
  • Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) tax compliance
  • Import Declaration Form (IDF) for customs
  • M-Pesa requires Kenyan mobile number for suppliers

What better control looks like

Before you send

Confirm the beneficiary name, account details, invoice amount, currency, payment purpose, and any local routing detail before value leaves your account.

Where M-Pesa or another local rail is available, the question is whether it fits your payment type, amount, and beneficiary setup.

After you send

You need payment proof the supplier can use, a clear reference trail, and a treasury contact who can help if the supplier says funds have not arrived or the bank asks for documents.

Details your team should get right

Supplier and beneficiary details

  • Bank Code + Account: Bank code and account (or M-Pesa for mobile)
  • Tea exporters (Kericho, Nandi)
  • Coffee growers (Mt. Kenya, Nyeri)
  • Textile manufacturers (Nairobi, Thika)
  • Logistics providers (Mombasa, Nairobi)

Documents and timing

  • Milestone-based: 30% deposit, 40% on manufacture, 30% on delivery. Project cycles 3-12 months.
  • 30/40/30 milestone structure. LC for orders over £500k. Retention (5%) for warranty period.
  • Project-based and lumpy. Subsidy cycles drive deadlines. Installation season (spring/summer). Q1/Q4 budget cycles.
  • HIGH: CNY (70% of solar), EUR (wind), JPY/KRW (batteries). Project timelines 3-12 months create exposure windows.
  • MCS Certificate
  • IEC Test Reports
  • CE/UKCA Declaration
  • Warranty Certificate
  • M-Pesa dominates - most suppliers prefer it over bank transfers
  • Kenya = East African trade hub, gateway to EAC market
  • Tea/coffee exports world-renowned - quality documentation required
  • Use PesaLink for bank-to-bank, M-Pesa for smaller suppliers
All payments are subject to standard compliance and sanctions screening. Certain industries and countries not supported.

Need help with this trade payment?

If your supplier is waiting, your bank has asked for documents, or you need the payment flow checked before money moves, talk to us before it becomes a larger issue.