How to Export Fresh Produce from Kenya: Regulatory and Logistics Guide
From AFA-HCD licensing and KEPHIS phytosanitary certification to cold chain management and market-specific documentation — the complete operational reference for Kenyan fresh produce exporters.
Key Takeaways
Kenya is one of Africa's most accomplished fresh produce exporters. Hass avocados, French beans, roses, snow peas, chives, passion fruit, and mangoes leave Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and Mombasa Port bound for Europe, the Middle East, and Asia throughout the year.
But the compliance framework that makes these exports possible is demanding. It involves multiple government agencies, annual licence renewals, per-consignment certification, farm-level audits, and market-specific documentation that varies significantly between the EU, UK, UAE, and other destinations.
This article covers the full export process — from obtaining your AFA-HCD licence and KEPHIS registration to managing cold chain logistics and preparing a shipment that clears customs on first presentation.
Kenya's Fresh Produce Export Landscape
Kenya's horticultural export sector is one of East Africa's most developed agricultural industries. The country exports certified fresh produce to over 50 countries, with the EU, UK, UAE, and wider Middle East as its primary markets. Cut flowers, avocados, French beans, snow peas, passion fruit, mangoes, chives, and herbs form the core of Kenya's export basket.
The industry is structured around smallholder outgrower networks — small farms supplying larger, licensed exporters who manage compliance, packhouse operations, and market relationships. Both individual exporters and outgrower aggregators must comply with the full regulatory framework.
Kenya's export competitiveness is built on altitude and year-round growing capacity. Highland regions around Nairobi, Meru, Nakuru, Murang'a, and Kiambu produce consistent quality regardless of season — a key advantage over European origins that are seasonal and over Southern African origins with longer transit times.
Vegetables: French beans, snow peas, mangetout, sugar snaps, chives, broccoli, baby corn, courgettes. Fruits: Hass avocados, mangoes, passion fruit, pineapples. Flowers: Roses, alstroemeria, carnations. Herbs: Coriander, basil, dill, parsley, mint. Nuts: Macadamia. Each category has specific regulatory, certification, and logistics requirements covered in this article.
AFA-HCD Export Licence: The Foundation
The AFA Horticultural Crops Directorate (AFA-HCD) export licence is the primary operating permission for all Kenyan fresh produce exporters. No scheduled horticultural produce may be legally exported from Kenya without it.
The licence is issued under the Crops Act 2013, which created the Agriculture and Food Authority (AFA) and consolidated the former Horticultural Crops Development Authority (HCDA) into AFA. All previous HCDA licences migrated to the AFA-HCD framework.
What the AFA-HCD licence covers
The licence covers all scheduled fresh fruits, vegetables, flowers, herbs, and nuts. Scheduled produce includes avocados, mangoes, French beans, snow peas, passion fruit, macadamia, roses, chives, and dozens of other horticultural crops. A licence holder can export any scheduled produce — the licence is not crop-specific.
Annual renewal by 30 June
The AFA-HCD export licence must be renewed annually. The renewal deadline is 30 June each year. Missing this deadline suspends your export operations until the licence is reinstated. Renewal is completed through the AFA IMIS portal. Set a 90-day advance reminder to allow time for any compliance issues to be resolved before the deadline.
The AFA-HCD export licence is not issued to farms alone — it covers the full operation including packhouse facilities. Your packhouse must pass an AFA-HCD inspection confirming hygiene standards, temperature control systems, grading and sorting capability, and traceability record-keeping. A licence granted without a compliant packhouse is grounds for rejection or revocation at any subsequent audit.
KEPHIS: Phytosanitary Certification and IEICS Registration
The Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS) issues the phytosanitary certificate required by importing countries before they will accept any Kenyan fresh produce consignment.
KEPHIS inspectors physically examine every consignment at the packhouse or at JKIA before a phytosanitary certificate is issued. The inspection covers regulated pests, diseases, and contamination. For avocados, a laboratory test confirming oil content and maturity is mandated before the certificate is issued.
KEPHIS IEICS: Farm and Packhouse Registration
Before your first export, all farms supplying produce for export must be registered on the KEPHIS Integrated Export Import Certification System (IEICS). Each farm and packhouse receives a unique identification code that must appear on all shipping documentation. This code enables end-to-end traceability from farm to export.
ePhyto: Digital Phytosanitary Certificates
Kenya is connected to the IPPC's ePhyto Hub. Electronic phytosanitary certificates can be transmitted directly to importing country customs systems, reducing paper-based delays and certificate fraud risk. Confirm with your KEPHIS inspector whether your target market accepts ePhyto before your first shipment.
KenyaGAP and GlobalGAP: Farm-Level Certification
KenyaGAP is Kenya's national Good Agricultural Practices standard, developed by AFA-HCD and benchmarked to GlobalGAP. It is a prerequisite for obtaining the AFA-HCD export licence and the minimum certification expected by all international buyers.
KenyaGAP distinguishes two compliance levels. Major Musts are mandatory and cover traceability, pesticide storage, worker welfare, and food safety. Minor Musts are best practice requirements covering IPM records, soil testing, and environmental management. All Major Musts must be met before certification is issued.
For GlobalGAP certification in Kenya, accredited certification bodies include AfriCert, EnCert, and Bureau Veritas Kenya. The certification process involves a full farm audit covering all Major and Minor Must requirements. Non-conformities in Major Musts must be corrected before the certificate is issued. Certification is valid for one year and requires an annual renewal audit.
Step-by-Step: From Licence to First Shipment
Register Your Business and Obtain KRA Credentials
Register your company with the Registrar of Companies and obtain a Certificate of Incorporation or Business Registration. Apply for a company KRA PIN and Tax Compliance Certificate via iTax. These are prerequisites for all subsequent regulatory applications.
Register on the AFA IMIS Portal
Create an account on the AFA Integrated Management Information System at afa.go.ke. This is the digital gateway for all AFA-HCD licensing, annual renewals, and farm data management.
Register Your Farm and Packhouse on KEPHIS IEICS
Create an account on the KEPHIS Integrated Export Import Certification System. Register every farm supplying produce for export. Each farm and packhouse receives a unique code. This code must appear on all export shipping documents — it is the backbone of Kenya's produce traceability system.
Obtain KenyaGAP or GlobalGAP Certification
Engage an accredited certification body for a farm audit against KenyaGAP or GlobalGAP standards. Address all Major Must non-conformities before the audit date. Allow at least 30–60 days for the certification process after engaging the auditor.
Pass AFA-HCD Farm and Packhouse Audit
AFA-HCD county staff will inspect your farm for GAP compliance and your packhouse for hygiene, temperature control, traceability systems, and documentation practices. The audit result feeds directly into your licence application decision.
Submit AFA-HCD Licence Application
Download and complete Forms 1A, 1B, PS1, PS11, and EQS Form from the AFA-HCD website. Attach all supporting documents: KRA PIN, incorporation certificate, directors' IDs, packhouse layout, GAP certification, and buyer agreements. Attend vetting at AFA-HCD headquarters at JKIA. Pay the licence fee on successful vetting.
Consider FPEAK Membership
Register with the Fresh Produce Exporters Association of Kenya (FPEAK) for access to regulatory updates, compliance training, market intelligence, and advocacy. Most buyers use FPEAK membership as a due diligence indicator when qualifying Kenyan suppliers.
Prepare Consignment and Apply for Phytosanitary Certificate
Grade and pack produce to buyer specification. For EU-bound shipments, conduct pre-shipment MRL testing for French beans, peas, herbs, and other high-scrutiny categories. Apply for the KEPHIS phytosanitary certificate via the IEICS portal. KEPHIS inspectors will conduct physical inspection before issuing the certificate.
Obtain Remaining Documents and Ship
Collect the AFA-HCD export certificate, certificate of origin (KRA for preferential or KNCCI for non-preferential), EUR.1 for EU shipments, commercial invoice, packing list, and airway bill or bill of lading. Load onto temperature-controlled transport. For air freight, deliver to the JKIA Perishables Terminal within the airline's acceptance window.
Per-Consignment Documents: The Complete Checklist
Every export consignment from Kenya requires its own set of documents. These must be consistent in lot numbers, weights, and origin details. Even a minor discrepancy between the commercial invoice and packing list can trigger a customs hold that causes perishable produce to deteriorate in a bonded facility.
| Document | Issuing Body | Required For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phytosanitary Certificate | KEPHIS | All markets | Issued per consignment after physical inspection; ePhyto available for participating markets |
| AFA-HCD Export Certificate | AFA Horticultural Crops Directorate | All markets | Confirms produce cleared by HCD; issued per consignment alongside phytosanitary cert |
| Laboratory Test Report | AFA-HCD accredited labs | Avocados · Beans · Peas | Mandatory for avocados (maturity/oil content); strongly recommended for EU beans and peas |
| Non-Preferential Certificate of Origin | KNCCI | All markets | Authenticates Kenyan origin; issued per consignment by KNCCI |
| EUR.1 Movement Certificate | KRA Rules of Origin Section | EU · EPA markets | Enables preferential duty rates under Kenya-EU Economic Partnership Agreement |
| COMESA / AfCFTA COO | KRA Rules of Origin Section | COMESA · AfCFTA markets | Enables regional preferential tariff treatment; issued by KRA for applicable markets |
| Commercial Invoice | Exporter | All markets | Must match packing list and AWB/B/L in all quantities, lot codes, and values |
| Packing List | Exporter / Packhouse | All markets | Carton count, net/gross weight, variety, grade, and KEPHIS IEICS farm/packhouse codes |
| Airway Bill / Bill of Lading | Freight carrier | All markets | Title document for cargo; for air freight (most Kenyan horticulture) this is the AWB |
Market-by-Market Requirements: EU, UK, UAE and Beyond
Documentation and certification requirements differ significantly between Kenya's major export markets. Preparing the wrong set of documents for a market is one of the most common and avoidable compliance failures.
| Market | Key Certifications | Specific Requirement | High-Risk Categories |
|---|---|---|---|
| European Union | GlobalGAP · HACCP · MRL compliance | EUR.1 movement certificate; EUDR due diligence for wood-origin products; bilateral SPS notification for new produce categories | French beans · Snow peas · Chili · Basil — 100% documentary checks |
| United Kingdom | GlobalGAP · BRC Global Standard · HACCP | UK BTOM (Border Target Operating Model) SPS checks; UK-specific EUR.1 equivalent for UK EPA; Arabic and English labels not required | Beans · Herbs — residue monitoring programme |
| UAE / Middle East | GlobalGAP or KenyaGAP · HACCP | MOCCAE consignment approval; bilingual (Arabic/English) labelling; UAE.S GSO pesticide residue limits apply | Herbs · Leafy greens — UAE MRL checks |
| Netherlands (EU hub) | GlobalGAP · HACCP · Rainforest Alliance (retail) | Entry point for broader EU redistribution; Dutch wholesale buyers require consistent weekly supply volumes | Avocados — maturity certification required |
| United States | GlobalGAP · FDA FSMA compliance · USDA phyto | US FDA Prior Notice for food imports; FSMA Foreign Supplier Verification Programme (FSVP) may apply to buyer | Beans · Herbs — FDA import alerts history |
| Japan | JGAP or GlobalGAP · Strict MRL compliance | Japan has some of the world's strictest pesticide MRL limits; positive list system applies — unlisted chemicals default to 0.01ppm | All produce — Japan positive list MRL system |
French beans, snow peas, chili, and basil from Kenya are subject to 100% documentary checks and increased physical inspection rates at EU border inspection posts. This is a result of prior MRL violation history. If you export these categories to the EU, you must maintain meticulous spray diaries, use only PCPB-registered pesticides, strictly observe pre-harvest intervals, and conduct residue testing on every consignment before departure. A single MRL violation can result in strengthened measures being applied to all Kenyan exporters of that commodity.
Exporting avocados from Kenya? The certification, maturity testing, and EU market requirements are covered in depth in our crop-specific reference:
How to Export Hass Avocados from Kenya — The Complete Compliance Guide →Exporting chives, coriander, basil, or other fresh herbs? European compliance, MRL management, and pricing strategies are covered here:
How to Export Fresh Herbs from Africa to Europe — Compliance, Markets and Pricing →Logistics: Air Freight, Sea Freight and Cold Chain
Kenya's logistics mix is split between air freight — which dominates for short shelf-life produce — and sea freight via Mombasa, which handles longer shelf-life crops and bulk shipments.
Air Freight via JKIA
The majority of Kenya's horticultural exports — cut flowers, French beans, snow peas, chives, passion fruit, and avocados — move by air through Jomo Kenyatta International Airport's dedicated Perishables Terminal. The terminal operates 24 hours and handles temperature-controlled processing, documentation, and airside transfer.
Delivery to the JKIA Perishables Terminal must occur within the airline's acceptance window — typically 4–6 hours before scheduled departure for perishables. Produce that misses the acceptance window may be held for the next available flight, potentially compromising quality.
Sea Freight via Mombasa
Avocados (large volumes), mangoes, macadamia nuts, and other produce with shelf life sufficient for 10–14 day transit can be shipped by sea via Mombasa Port in refrigerated containers. Sea freight is significantly cheaper than air per kilogram — the trade-off is transit time and the need for more careful pre-shipment maturity management to ensure produce arrives at correct ripeness.
Most Kenyan fresh produce losses in export — beyond regulatory rejection — occur due to cold chain failures between the packhouse and the aircraft hold. Pre-cooling to the correct temperature before loading is critical. Use IoT temperature data loggers in every shipment. Buyers increasingly require temperature log data as evidence of cold chain integrity, and failure to provide it is grounds for quality claims rejection.
Get Verified on ExportReady.africa — Reach Global Buyers
ExportReady.africa lists verified Kenyan fresh produce exporters with confirmed AFA-HCD licences, KEPHIS registration, and GlobalGAP status. Get your profile in front of international buyers actively searching for Kenyan suppliers.
Get Verified Free →Frequently Asked Questions
Kenya's export regulatory framework is demanding — but it exists to protect Kenya's reputation in premium global markets. The AFA-HCD licence and KEPHIS IEICS registration are your foundation. KenyaGAP or GlobalGAP your competitive credential. The phytosanitary certificate, lab test report, and certificate of origin your per-shipment essentials. And an unbroken cold chain from packhouse to buyer is the one thing that protects everything you have invested. Get the compliance right, and the market access follows.
📚 Related Reading on ExportReady.africa
- → How to Export Hass Avocados from Kenya — The Complete Compliance Guide
- → How to Export Fresh Herbs from Africa to Europe — Compliance, Markets and Pricing
- → Crop-Specific Export Guides — Full Category
- → Browse Verified Kenyan Agricultural Exporters
- → Compliance Resource Hub — KenyaGAP, GlobalGAP & EUDR
