Kenya Power has commenced an exercise to mop up all customers utilising electricity to charge their electric vehicles with the aim of metering them under the E-mobility tariff.
The tariff allows users to enjoy electricity at a discounted rate of KSh 16 per unit during peak hours and KSh 8 per unit during off-peak hours. It also ensures visibility of energy requirements by the E-Mobility space thereby providing critical data for decision making and planning for future EV energy demand.
“Three years ago, Kenya Power successfully lobbied for a special electricity tariff to serve the Emobility industry. Our commitment is to create awareness, support the market and drive the adoption of e-mobility in the country. The transition must serve not only private car owners, but also public transport, two and three wheelers, logistics operators, county transport systems, small businesses and ordinary Kenyans who need cleaner, cheaper and more reliable mobility options,” said Kenya Power’s Managing Director & CEO, Joseph Siror.
Currently, there are 331 customers metered under the E-mobility tariff, having grown steadily over the years since the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority approved Kenya Power’s request for a special tariff to cater for the e-mobility sector in 2023.
The Company projects that the number of customers metered under this tariff to hit 1,000 by the end of the current financial year, with further growth projected in the coming years as more customers are onboarded under this tariff, as well as in alignment with the growing uptake of electric vehicles in the country.
Since July 2023 when the implementation of the E-mobility tariff commenced, Kenya Power has recorded surging electricity sales, having grown by 113% over the last 34 months from 13,500 kWh (units) to 1.5 million kWh (units) and earning KSh 382 million in cumulative revenue during the period.
“November 2025 was a defining moment, when we crossed the one million units threshold in a single month for the first time. Since then, monthly volumes have consistently remained above that level, showing that the market has moved into a new phase of high-volume adoption,” said Siror.
The Electric Mobility Association of Kenya estimates that the electric vehicles charging will generate KSh 5.79 billion in electricity sales by the year 2030 with an annual metered grid demand of 121 GWh.
Kenya had registered over 35,000 EVs by the end of 2025, comprising mostly two-wheelers, up from a total of 796 EVs that had been registered three years ago.
Riding on the goodwill of sustained policy support and enabling tax incentives, such as duty exemption on importation of the first100,000 EVs, zero-rating of VAT on EVs and lithium-ion batteries, as well as the reduction of excise duty on electric bicycles, electric motorcycles and lithium-ion batteries, uptake of electric vehicles is expected to grow significantly.


