Ruto assents to VAT Bill allowing fuel tax cut to 8 per cent
National
By
Esther Nyambura
| Apr 17, 2026
On Friday, April 17, President William Ruto assented to the Value Added Tax (Amendment) Bill, 2026, allowing the Treasury to cut VAT on petroleum products to 8 per cent.
The new law amends Section 6 of the VAT Act to permit the Treasury Cabinet Secretary to vary VAT on petroleum products beyond the previous cap, in a bid to ease fuel costs amid the Middle East crisis.
Previously, the Act allowed the Treasury CS to adjust VAT by up to 25 per cent of the standard rate of 16 per cent.
However, the President said the 25 per cent cap was insufficient to cushion Kenyans from rising fuel prices.
President Ruto assents to VAT (Amendment) Bill, 2026, allowing Treasury to cut fuel VAT to 8 percent for 90 days to ease costs. pic.twitter.com/m7nzkiT0JD
READ MORE
Families feel the pinch as war-hit diaspora remittances shrink
Mbadi names Adan Mohamed as new KRA chief
Kenya to host green hydrogen symposium as country positions for the global stage
Kingdom Bank deepens MSME push with Industrial Area branch
Court declines to lift orders blocking Safaricom sale as Vodafone loses bid to exit case
Kenya blockchain industry urges faster stablecoin adoption amid new digital asset rules
Activist files petition to block fuel price hike, seeks conservatory orders
Government launches construction of 114 solar mini grids in 14 counties
Kenya's cybersecurity skills gap persists despite training efforts
Ruto's budget limbo deepens as IMF digs in on bailout conditions
— The Standard Digital (@StandardKenya) April 17, 2026
The Amendment Bill was introduced in the National Assembly on Thursday, April 16, by Deputy Majority Leader Owen Baya.
In a record one hour, Members of Parliament debated and passed the Bill, effectively legalising the Treasury’s directive to cut VAT by 50 per cent.
The revised VAT rate will apply for 90 days, with provisions allowing the Treasury to extend the period by a further 90 days if the fuel crisis persists.
Without the amendment, the latest fuel price changes would have been illegal.
Following the adjustment, a litre of super petrol will retail at Sh197.60, while diesel will cost Sh196.63.