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Statutory Deductions

Kazisafi automatically calculates all statutory deductions required under Kenyan law. This page explains each deduction, how it is calculated, and how they interact with one another.

Statutory deductions breakdown on a payslip

Some deductions reduce the income used to calculate others, so the order matters. Kazisafi calculates them in this sequence:

  1. NSSF — deducted first, reduces taxable income
  2. SHIF — deducted second, reduces taxable income
  3. Affordable Housing Levy — deducted third, reduces taxable income
  4. PAYE — calculated last, on the remaining taxable income

PAYE is Kenya’s income tax, calculated on a progressive scale. The more an employee earns, the higher the rate applied to the upper portion of their income.

Monthly Taxable Income (KES)Rate
Up to 24,00010%
24,001 to 32,33325%
32,334 to 500,00030%
500,001 to 800,00032.5%
Above 800,00035%

Taxable income is calculated by subtracting the following from gross salary:

  • NSSF employee contribution
  • SHIF employee contribution
  • Affordable Housing Levy (employee portion)
  • Registered pension contributions (capped at the lesser of: actual contribution, KES 30,000, or 20% of gross salary)
  • Mortgage interest (capped at KES 25,000 per year)

After calculating the tax amount, the following reliefs are subtracted:

ReliefAmount
Personal ReliefKES 2,400 per month
Insurance Relief15% of insurance premiums, up to KES 5,000 per month

The final PAYE amount is the tax from the bands minus applicable reliefs. PAYE is never negative. If reliefs exceed the calculated tax, PAYE is zero.

NSSF uses a two-tier contribution system. Both the employer and the employee contribute equal amounts.

TierEarnings Range (KES)RateMaximum Contribution
Tier 10 to 9,0006%KES 540
Tier 29,001 to 108,0006%KES 5,940

The maximum monthly contribution is KES 6,480 per person (employee and employer each pay up to KES 6,480).

SHIF replaced the former NHIF and is calculated as a percentage of gross salary.

DetailValue
Rate2.75% of gross salary
MinimumKES 300 per month
SplitEqual employer and employee contributions

Both the employer and the employee contribute 2.75% of gross salary, with a minimum of KES 300 each per month.

The Affordable Housing Levy funds the government’s affordable housing program.

DetailValue
Rate1.5% of gross salary
Employer1.5% of gross salary
Employee1.5% of gross salary

Both parties contribute equally at 1.5% of the employee’s gross salary.

NITA (National Industrial Training Authority)

Section titled “NITA (National Industrial Training Authority)”

NITA is a flat-rate levy paid entirely by the employer.

DetailValue
AmountKES 50 per employee per month
Paid ByEmployer only

Employees are not charged for NITA. It does not appear as a deduction on payslips but is included in employer cost reports.

HELB loan repayments are tracked as employee deductions for employees who have outstanding education loans.

  • The deduction amount is set per employee based on their HELB repayment schedule.
  • Kazisafi generates a HELB export file for submission to HELB.

Statutory rates change as the government updates tax and contribution laws. Kazisafi keeps your payroll calculations current by applying the correct rates for each year automatically. Past payroll calculations always retain the rates that were in effect when they were processed, so your historical records remain accurate.