One of the most consequential early decisions an entrepreneur makes is choosing a business structure. In Kenya, the main options are: sole proprietorship (business name), general partnership, limited liability partnership (LLP), limited liability company (Ltd), and company limited by guarantee (NGO/charity).
Sole Proprietorship
The simplest — you register a business name at the Business Registration Service. There's no separation between personal and business liability. Tax is filed on your personal income tax return. Best for very small operations where scale is not the ambition.
Limited Company (Ltd)
A separate legal entity. Shareholders' liability is limited to their unpaid share capital. Can own property, sue and be sued, and attract equity investors. Taxed at corporation tax rate (30% for resident companies). More administrative overhead but essential for serious businesses.
Comparison Table
- Liability: Unlimited (sole trader) vs. Limited (Ltd)
- Tax: Personal income tax (sole) vs. Corporation tax 30% (Ltd)
- Cost to form: ~KSh 4,000 (sole) vs. ~KSh 15,000 (Ltd)
- Funding: Limited (sole) vs. Can issue shares (Ltd)
- Continuity: Ceases with owner (sole) vs. Perpetual (Ltd)
Our Recommendation
If your business earns above KSh 2 million annually, is growing, employs people, or you intend to seek external funding, incorporate as a limited company. The liability protection and credibility are worth the modest extra cost. Avatechtax registers both business names (from KSh 4,000) and limited companies (from KSh 15,000). Learn more.



