The New Standard for Global Exports

24K subscribers

Stay ahead of shifting global regulations. Subscribe for exclusive insights on EUDR compliance, audit-ready traceability, and the digital tools required to secure your position in the premium international export market.

Kenya Agricultural Export Regulations: KEPHIS, HCDA & AFA Requirements | ExportReady.africa
🌍  African Agricultural Export Regulations

Kenya Agricultural Export Regulations: KEPHIS, HCDA and AFA Requirements

Everything a Kenyan fresh produce exporter needs to know — licensing, phytosanitary certification, packhouse compliance, and per-consignment documentation — in one authoritative guide. Covering KEPHIS, AFA, and HCD requirements end to end.

📋 Compliance Guide ⏱ 12 min read 🌱 Fresh Produce & Horticulture

Key Takeaways

1
Three regulatory bodies govern Kenya's horticultural exports — AFA-HCD for licensing, KEPHIS for phytosanitary certification, and KEBS for standards conformity.
2
Export license and IEICS registration are both mandatory before any shipment departs — the AFA-HCD license and KEPHIS IEICS farm registration work in tandem.
3
A phytosanitary certificate is required per consignment — non-negotiable for market entry in the EU, UK, and Middle East.
4
KenyaGAP vs. GlobalGAP — KenyaGAP covers regional markets; EU supermarket buyers require full GlobalGAP certification as the international benchmark.
5
100% EU documentary checks apply to French beans, peas, and chili from Kenya at all EU border inspection posts.
6
Eight documents per consignment — export license, phytosanitary certificate, lab test report, export certificate, certificate of origin, invoice, packing list, and airway bill.

Kenya is one of Africa's most productive agricultural exporters. Fresh avocados, French beans, roses, chives, snow peas, macadamia nuts, and mangoes leave Kenyan airports bound for Europe, the Middle East, and Asia — generating hundreds of billions of Kenya shillings in foreign exchange each year.

Yet the compliance framework governing these exports is layered, multi-agency, and unforgiving. A single documentation gap — a missing lab test report, an expired phytosanitary certificate, or a packhouse that has not passed its AFA-HCD audit — can result in an entire consignment being rejected at the point of entry.

This guide breaks down Kenya's agricultural export regulations from the ground up. Whether you are applying for your first horticultural export license or tightening an existing operation for EU compliance, every requirement is covered here.

3
Primary regulatory bodies governing Kenyan agri-exports
8+
Documents required per fresh produce consignment
6
Preferential trade agreements available to Kenyan exporters
100%
EU documentary checks on regulated Kenyan produce
Kenya's Export Regulatory Framework THREE AGENCIES · ONE COMPLIANCE CHAIN 🏛️ AFA — HCD Horticultural Crops Directorate › Export License & Annual Renewal › Packhouse Registration & Audit › KenyaGAP & Lab Test Reports 🔬 KEPHIS Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate › Phytosanitary Certificates › IEICS Farm & Packhouse Registration › ePhyto Hub Integration 📊 KEBS · KenTrade Standards & Single Window › MRL & Quality Standards (PCPB) › Certificate of Origin (KNCCI/KRA) › KESWS Digital Single Window All agencies interconnected through the Kenya Electronic Single Window System (KenTrade / KESWS)

The Legal Framework Governing Kenya's Agricultural Exports

Kenya's agricultural export compliance system rests on clear legislative foundations. The Crops Act of 2013 is the primary statute. It restructured the sector by creating the Agriculture and Food Authority (AFA) and consolidating previously independent commodity boards into specialised AFA directorates.

The former Horticultural Crops Development Authority (HCDA) — the body most exporters previously dealt with — was formally absorbed into AFA through Gazette Notice No. 197 of 2014. It now operates as the Horticultural Crops Directorate (HCD), retaining all original licensing and certification functions under the AFA umbrella.

Alongside AFA, the KEPHIS Act governs plant health inspections, and the Standards Act empowers KEBS to enforce quality and MRL compliance on all exports.

⚠️
HCDA vs. HCD — What Changed?

Many older guides still reference the "HCDA export license." Officially, HCDA no longer exists as a standalone body. The correct current name is AFA Horticultural Crops Directorate (AFA-HCD). Portals and official forms have been updated accordingly.

AFA-HCD Export License: Who Needs It and How to Get It

The AFA-HCD export license is the primary operating permission for any business exporting scheduled horticultural crops from Kenya. All fresh fruits, vegetables, flowers, herbs, and nuts fall under this licensing requirement — including avocados, mangoes, French beans, snow peas, chives, passion fruit, macadamia, roses, carnations, and citrus fruits.

The eight-step licensing process

1

Business Registration

Register with the Registrar of Companies. Obtain a Certificate of Incorporation and CR12 form. Sole proprietors require a business registration certificate from the relevant county office.

2

KRA Credentials

Obtain a company KRA PIN via iTax. Apply for a Tax Compliance Certificate — this must be current at the time of application.

3

Register on AFA IMIS Portal

Create an account on the AFA Integrated Management Information System. This is the digital gateway for all AFA licensing transactions and annual renewals.

4

Register with KEPHIS IEICS

Register your farm and packhouse on the KEPHIS Integrated Export Import Certification System (IEICS). Each facility receives a unique ID code that must appear on all shipping documentation.

5

Farm and Packhouse Audit

AFA-HCD county staff inspect your farm for GAP compliance and your packhouse for hygiene, temperature control, and traceability systems before any license is issued.

6

Obtain KEPHIS Phytosanitary Statement

Email KEPHIS for a statement confirming your registration status. New applicants will receive a "nil" statement — this is acceptable for the initial application.

7

Complete and Submit Application Forms

Download and fill Forms 1A, 1B, PS1, PS11, and EQS Form from the AFA-HCD website. Attach all supporting documents including incorporation certificate, KRA PIN, directors' IDs, premises layout, and buyer agreements.

8

Vetting and License Issuance

Attend vetting at AFA-HCD headquarters at JKIA, Nairobi. On successful vetting, pay the license fee. The license must be renewed annually by 30 June via the AFA IMIS portal.

KEPHIS: Phytosanitary Certification and IEICS Registration

The Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS) is Kenya's national plant protection organisation under the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC). For exporters, KEPHIS has one indispensable function: issuing the phytosanitary certificate that importing countries require before permitting entry of any plant-based product.

Without a valid KEPHIS phytosanitary certificate, no fresh produce consignment will clear customs in the EU, UK, Middle East, or most other markets. It is issued per consignment and certifies that produce is free from regulated pests and diseases.

🌿
ePhyto: Kenya's Digital Phytosanitary Certificate

Kenya is connected to the IPPC's ePhyto Hub, enabling electronic phytosanitary certificates to be transmitted directly to importing country customs systems — eliminating paper-based delays and reducing fraud risk. Confirm with your KEPHIS inspector whether your target market accepts ePhyto.

Before issuing a phytosanitary certificate, KEPHIS inspectors assess produce for regulated pests, diseases, and weeds. For certain crops, laboratory testing is mandatory. For avocados, oil content and dry matter testing must confirm maturity before clearance is granted.

KenyaGAP and GlobalGAP: Farm-Level Certification Requirements

Access to premium export markets — particularly in Europe — requires farm-level certification beyond government licensing. KenyaGAP is Kenya's national Good Agricultural Practices standard, benchmarked to GlobalGAP and enforced by AFA-HCD.

KenyaGAP distinguishes two requirement levels: Major Musts (mandatory — covering traceability, pesticide storage, and worker welfare) and Minor Musts (best practice — covering IPM records and soil testing). All Major Musts must be fully complied with before a certificate is issued.

Certification Standards for Kenya's Export Markets 🌱 KenyaGAP Kenya's national GAP standard Benchmarked to GlobalGAP Regional & Middle East 🌍 GlobalGAP International private standard Third-party audited annually Required by EU retail chains 🔬 HACCP Hazard Analysis & Critical Control Points Packhouse food-safety standard 📋 BRC Global Standard Safety, quality & operations Packhouse-level audit Required by UK retail buyers Per-Consignment Document Flow FROM FARM REGISTRATION TO INTERNATIONAL CLEARANCE 1 AFA-HCD Export License Annual · On File Issuer: AFA-HCD 2 KEPHIS Phytosanitary Cert Per consignment ePhyto available 3 Lab Test Report Maturity · MRL · Pesticide Required for avocados, beans & peas 4 Certificate of Origin KNCCI · KRA EU · COMESA · AfCFTA 5 Shipping Docs Invoice · Packing List Airway Bill / B/L Exporter / Agent All submissions processed through the Kenya Electronic Single Window System — KenTrade / KESWS EU markets additionally require GlobalGAP/KenyaGAP certificate · EUR.1 Movement Certificate where applicable

Per-Consignment Export Documentation: Complete Reference

Beyond standing licenses and farm registrations, every individual export consignment requires its own set of documents.

DocumentIssuing BodyRequired ForNotes
Phytosanitary CertificateKEPHISAll marketsIssued per consignment; ePhyto available; must align with actual shipment date
AFA-HCD Export CertificateAFA-HCDAll marketsConfirms compliance with Kenyan quality standards on size, maturity, and packaging
Laboratory Test ReportAFA-HCD accredited labsMost fresh produceMandatory for avocados (oil content, dry matter), beans, and peas
Non-Preferential Certificate of OriginKNCCIAll marketsAuthenticates Kenyan origin; required by all buyers for customs clearance
Preferential COO (EUR.1 / AfCFTA)KRA Rules of OriginEU · COMESA · EAC · AGOAEnables reduced import duties under applicable free trade agreements
Commercial InvoiceExporterAll marketsMust match packing list and airway bill exactly; used for customs valuation
Packing ListExporter / PackhouseAll marketsDetails variety, weights, carton count, and lot traceability codes
Airway Bill / Bill of LadingFreight AgentAll marketsTitle document for cargo; most Kenyan horticulture moves via airfreight
GlobalGAP / KenyaGAP CertificateAccredited Certification BodyEU · UK supermarket chainsAnnual farm audit; EU retail requires GlobalGAP — KenyaGAP alone is insufficient
BRC Global Standard CertificateBRC-accredited auditorUK buyers · large retailersPackhouse-level audit; increasingly required by UK supermarket supply chains

Maximum Residue Levels (MRLs) and EU Compliance

MRL violations are the single most common cause of Kenyan produce being rejected at EU border inspection posts. Maximum Residue Levels are the legally permitted upper limits for pesticide residues in food, and the EU enforces some of the strictest thresholds in the world.

🚨
EU Heightened Checks on Regulated Kenyan Produce

French beans, peas, and chili from Kenya face 100% documentary checks and increased physical inspections at EU entry points. Exporters handling these commodities must keep spray diaries, pesticide records, and pre-harvest interval (PHI) compliance audit-ready at all times.

To comply with MRL requirements, use only pesticides registered by the Pest Control Products Board (PCPB), observe correct application rates and pre-harvest intervals, and ensure consignments are residue-tested before departure. KEPHIS and AFA-HCD enforce these checks as part of the pre-export inspection process.

Smallholder Farmers and the Export Compliance Pathway

Kenya's export sector depends heavily on smallholder farmers, who account for a large share of total horticultural production. However, the compliance architecture is not designed for individual farmers to export independently.

The AFA-HCD export license requires a certified packhouse — a significant capital investment. Most smallholder farmers participate in exports through three established models:

  • Outgrower Schemes: A licensed exporter sources from registered smallholder farms under a structured supply agreement. The exporter holds the license; the farmer registers as a source farm on AFA-HCD.
  • Cooperatives: Farmer cooperatives pool resources to operate a shared packhouse and hold a collective export license. FPEAK membership provides compliance guidance for cooperative exporters.
  • Direct Export: AFA-HCD farm registration for farms under 5 hectares is free of charge. However, an individual license still requires packhouse certification and the full vetting process.

Kenya's Trade Agreements and Certificate of Origin Requirements

The certificate of origin your consignment carries determines whether your buyer benefits from preferential import duties. Kenya is party to several trade arrangements, each requiring a distinct certificate type.

AgreementKey MarketsCertificate TypeIssuing Body
EU Economic Partnership Agreement27 EU Member StatesEUR.1 Movement CertificateKRA Rules of Origin Section
COMESA21 African member statesCOMESA Certificate of OriginKRA Rules of Origin Section
EAC Customs UnionUganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, DRC, S. SudanEAC Certificate of OriginKNCCI / KRA
AGOAUnited StatesAGOA Certificate of OriginKRA Rules of Origin Section
AfCFTAAfrican Union member statesAfCFTA Certificate of OriginKRA Rules of Origin Section
GSP / Generalised SchemeVarious developed countriesForm A / REX StatementKRA / Registered Exporter

Common Compliance Failures and How to Prevent Them

Understanding the regulatory framework is only half the challenge. Execution errors remain a persistent cause of consignment rejections and buyer relationship damage. The most frequent failures are entirely preventable.

FailureRoot CauseConsequencePrevention
MRL ExceedanceIncorrect pesticide use or PHI not observedEU rejection · origin blacklistingUse PCPB-registered pesticides; maintain spray diaries; pre-shipment residue testing
Expired Phytosanitary CertShipment delayed after certificate issuedConsignment held at borderAlign cert issuance with actual departure date; track expiry windows
Lapsed Export LicenseAnnual renewal by 30 June missedAll exports suspendedSet 90-day calendar reminders; use AFA IMIS renewal alerts
Mismatched Shipping DocsInvoice, packing list, and AWB not reconciledCustoms delay · buyer rejectionUse standardised templates; cross-check all documents before release
GlobalGAP LapseAnnual audit missed or non-conformities not closedEU retail orders suspendedMonitor cert expiry dates; close non-conformities well in advance
Unregistered Source FarmProduce sourced from farm not on KEPHIS IEICSCertificate refused · traceability failureRegister all outgrowers before first consignment; audit sub-contracted farms

Is Your Kenya Export Operation Compliance-Ready?

Get verified on ExportReady.africa — show global buyers your KEPHIS registration, AFA-HCD license, and GlobalGAP credentials in one trusted profile.

Get Verified Free →

Kenya's Digital Export Systems: KenTrade, IEICS, and ePhyto

Kenya has significantly digitised its export compliance infrastructure. The Kenya Trade Network Agency (KenTrade) operates the Kenya Electronic Single Window System, linking KEPHIS, AFA, KEBS, DVS, and KRA into a unified submission portal. Exporters submit permit applications, receive approvals, and track consignments through a single digital interface — eliminating the need to visit multiple government offices per shipment.

The KEPHIS IEICS platform tracks produce from registered farms to the shipping point, generating unique facility codes that appear on all shipping documents. Through the IPPC ePhyto Hub, phytosanitary certificates can now be transmitted electronically to importing country customs systems — cutting clearance times and reducing documentation fraud risk significantly.

The Bottom Line for Kenya Exporters

The foundation is a valid AFA-HCD export license and KEPHIS IEICS farm registration. Per consignment, every shipment needs its phytosanitary certificate, lab test report, export certificate, and certificate of origin. Layer in GlobalGAP or KenyaGAP certification, ensure MRL compliance, and your credentials sell themselves to global buyers before you ever get on a call.

For African exporters looking to showcase compliance credentials to international buyers, ExportReady.africa provides verified exporter profiles displaying all certifications — KEPHIS registration, AFA-HCD license status, GlobalGAP, and EUDR compliance — in a format global buyers trust. Register free and receive your Verified badge within 48 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is KEPHIS and why is it important for Kenyan exporters?+
KEPHIS (Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service) issues phytosanitary certificates for all plant-based export consignments from Kenya. Without a valid KEPHIS certificate, no fresh produce shipment will be accepted by importing countries. KEPHIS also registers farms and packhouses through its IEICS platform and operates Kenya's ePhyto Hub connection.
What is the difference between AFA, HCDA, and HCD in Kenya?+
The Agriculture and Food Authority (AFA) is the parent regulatory body under Kenya's Crops Act 2013. The former HCDA was merged into AFA and now operates as the Horticultural Crops Directorate (HCD), which issues export licenses for fresh produce. Exporters interact with AFA-HCD for licensing and the AFA IMIS portal for registration and renewal.
What documents are required to export fresh produce from Kenya?+
Core documents include a KEPHIS phytosanitary certificate, AFA-HCD export certificate, laboratory test report (for regulated produce), certificate of origin from KNCCI or KRA, commercial invoice, packing list, and airway bill or bill of lading. EU markets additionally require GlobalGAP or KenyaGAP certification and MRL test results.
How do I get a Kenya horticultural export license?+
Register your company, obtain KRA credentials, register on the AFA IMIS portal, have your farm and packhouse audited by AFA-HCD, obtain a KEPHIS phytosanitary statement, submit all application forms, and attend vetting at AFA-HCD headquarters at JKIA. A license fee applies and the license must be renewed annually by 30 June.
Is KenyaGAP mandatory for exporting to Europe?+
KenyaGAP is Kenya's domestic GAP standard benchmarked to GlobalGAP. Most European buyers and retailers require full GlobalGAP certification — not just KenyaGAP. KenyaGAP is accepted for regional and Middle East markets. Exporters targeting EU supermarket chains must achieve GlobalGAP through an accredited certification body.
What crops require AFA-HCD export certification in Kenya?+
All scheduled horticultural crops require AFA-HCD certification, including avocados, mangoes, French beans, snow peas, chives, passion fruit, macadamia, roses, carnations, herbs, and citrus fruits. The complete updated list is available on the AFA-HCD portal at afa.go.ke.
What are MRLs and how do they affect Kenyan exporters?+
Maximum Residue Levels (MRLs) are the legally permitted upper limits for pesticide residues in food. MRL violations are the most common cause of Kenyan consignment rejections at EU border posts. Exporters must use PCPB-registered pesticides, observe pre-harvest intervals, and test produce before shipment.
Can smallholder farmers in Kenya export directly?+
Smallholders can participate in exports through licensed aggregators, cooperatives, or outgrower schemes. Individual export licenses require a certified packhouse. AFA-HCD farm registration for farms under 5 hectares is free of charge.