The Shadow Over Our Savings: Why Kenyan SACCO Members are Gripped by Fear
For millions of Kenyans—teachers, civil servants, farmers, and entrepreneurs—Savings and Credit Cooperative Organizations (SACCOs) have long been more than just financial institutions.
They are lifelines. They are the engines of homeownership, the buffers against the high-interest predatory lending of commercial banks, and the primary vehicle for wealth creation for those who were otherwise excluded from the formal financial system.
However, a chilling wind is blowing through the cooperative sector. Across staff rooms, tea farms, and urban offices, a profound sense of anxiety has taken root.
The cause of this unease is the SACCO Societies (Amendment) Bill, 2025, a piece of legislation that many members fear could fundamentally strip them of control over their hard-earned money.
The Viral Storm: Fact vs. Fiction
The anxiety reached a fever pitch recently following the circulation of viral claims that the government intended to raid SACCO savings to the tune of Ksh 1 trillion to fund national infrastructure projects.
This sparked immediate outrage, with members fearing their personal deposits were being earmarked for state-led development without their consent.
The government moved quickly to douse the flames. On July 6, 2026, Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi issued a firm statement dismissing the claims:
“My attention has been drawn to false information circulating online claiming that the government intends to borrow money from SACCOs to fund projects through the NIF. This is a maliciously orchestrated attempt to misinform the public, tarnish the government’s reputation, and incite public outrage. Please treat this information as fake.”
While the government has categorically denied the “borrowing” narrative, the fear among the 14 million SACCO members persists.
Why? Because while the viral claim about a “government raid” may have been exaggerated, the actual text of the proposed Amendment Bill contains provisions that many stakeholders—including cooperative leaders—find deeply alarming.
The skepticism is rooted in a fundamental distrust of state interference in member-owned, member-managed institutions.
Anatomy of Concern: The Contentious Provisions
The primary driver of this apprehension is the proposed restructuring of the SACCO sector.
Critics argue that the Bill, in its current form, threatens to erode the democratic foundation upon which cooperatives are built.
1. The “Super SACCO” (Centralized Fund)
The Bill proposes the creation of a centralized fund—often referred to by members as a “Super SACCO.”
The core fear is that this entity will hold liquidity reserves from all 11,000+ SACCOs in Kenya, effectively centralizing control over the collective savings of millions of people.
2. Appointed vs. Elected Management
One of the most sacred principles of the cooperative movement is that members elect their own leaders.
The proposed Bill threatens to replace this autonomy. If the management of this new “Super SACCO” is to be appointed by the Executive, it removes the oversight mechanism that SACCO members rely on to hold their leaders accountable.
This shift is seen by many as a dangerous centralization of power that ignores the wishes of the very people who own the funds.
3. Investment and Lending Powers
There are deep concerns regarding the powers to be granted to this fund. Specifically, the mandate to invest in government securities (like Treasury bills and bonds) or fund Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) without the explicit, direct consultation of members.
While supporters of the Bill argue this could provide stability, members fear it exposes their savings to the volatility of state-driven investment risks.
4. The Threat to Liquidity
The “Super SACCO” (Fund) is proposed to have the power to determine the liquidity status of individual SACCOs.
This is perhaps the most frightening prospect for members: the possibility that a central authority could unilaterally refuse to release funds for loan disbursements to an individual SACCO, effectively freezing member access to their own money when they need it most.
5. Compounding Fears: Compensation and Autonomy
Other provisions in the Bill have further exacerbated the situation:
Compensation Caps: The proposal to cap compensation for members in the event of a SACCO collapse at just Ksh 100,000 is seen as an insult to those who have saved millions over decades.
Interference in Elections: The power for the government to reject elected management committees and mandate repeat elections is viewed as a direct assault on the cooperative spirit of self-governance.
Exit Hurdles: Many fear that the administrative and legal bottlenecks introduced by the Bill will make it nearly impossible for members to resign and withdraw their shares, effectively locking them into an institution they no longer trust.
A Movement Under Pressure
The scale of what is at stake cannot be overstated. By the first quarter of 2026, total assets in the regulated SACCO sector surpassed Ksh 1.2 trillion, with member deposits reaching approximately Ksh 870 billion.
These are not state funds; they are the private savings of 14 million Kenyans.
SACCOs have become the backbone of the Kenyan economy for the ordinary person.
Unlike commercial banks, which often demand collateral that average Kenyans cannot provide, SACCOs operate on trust, group guarantee models, and a shared vision of prosperity.
2025 Performance: A Reflection of Strength
The performance in the 2025 financial year, as reported in early 2026, underscores why the movement is so prized. Many SACCOs declared high dividends on share capital and competitive interest rates on deposits.
Top 50 SACCOs by Performance (Dividend Rates 2025/26):
| Rank | SACCO Name | Dividend Rate (Share Capital) | Interest Rate (Deposits) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tower SACCO | 20.00% | 13.00% |
| 2 | Port DT SACCO | 20.00% | 12.50% |
| 3 | Tembo SACCO | 20.00% | 11.75% |
| 4 | Maisha Bora SACCO | 20.00% | 11.00% |
| 5 | NSSF SACCO | 20.00% | 11.00% |
| 6 | Balozi SACCO | 20.00% | 9.20% |
| 7 | Yetu SACCO | 19.00% | 13.00% |
| 8 | Airports SACCO | 19.00% | 11.50% |
| 9 | Unison SACCO | 18.50% | 12.60% |
| 10 | Ndege Chai SACCO | 18.50% | 12.00% |
| 11 | Nation SACCO | 18.00% | 10.00% |
| 12 | Bandari SACCO | 18.00% | 10.75% |
| 13 | Biashara SACCO | 18.00% | 10.50% |
| 14 | Mafanikio SACCO | 18.00% | 10.25% |
| 15 | Ollin SACCO | 17.50% | 12.20% |
| 16 | Kenya National Police DT SACCO | 17.00% | 11.00% |
| 17 | Magadi SACCO | 17.00% | 10.00% |
| 18 | Mwito SACCO | 17.00% | 9.40% |
| 19 | Sukari SACCO | 17.00% | 11.80% |
| 20 | Hazina SACCO | 17.00% | 10.75% |
| 21 | IG SACCO | 17.00% | 12.12% |
| 22 | Cosmopolitan SACCO | 16.50% | 12.05% |
| 23 | Winas SACCO | 16.50% | 12.50% |
| 24 | Capital SACCO | 16.00% | 9.00% |
| 25 | Kimisitu SACCO | 16.00% | 9.50% |
| 26 | Nairobi Water SACCO | 16.00% | 9.25% |
| 27 | Gusii Mwalimu SACCO | 16.00% | 11.00% |
| 28 | Sheria SACCO | 16.00% | 8.75% |
| 29 | Stima SACCO | 16.00% | 11.00% |
| 30 | Utabibu SACCO | 16.00% | 9.50% |
| 31 | Imarisha SACCO | 15.10% | 10.05% |
| 32 | Acumen SACCO | 15.00% | 4.25% |
| 33 | Bingwa SACCO | 15.00% | 9.00% |
| 34 | GDC SACCO | 15.00% | 7.00% |
| 35 | Harambee SACCO | 15.00% | 8.00% |
| 36 | Imarika SACCO | 15.00% | 10.25% |
| 37 | KCS SACCO | 15.00% | 8.00% |
| 38 | KMA SACCO | 15.00% | 8.70% |
| 39 | Mentor SACCO | 15.00% | 12.50% |
| 40 | Mhasibu SACCO | 15.00% | 7.50% |
| 41 | Nawiri SACCO | 15.00% | 15.00% |
| 42 | Simba Chai SACCO | 15.00% | 11.00% |
| 43 | Trans Nation SACCO | 15.00% | 12.50% |
| 44 | Ushuru SACCO | 15.00% | 8.50% |
| 45 | Vision Afrika SACCO | 15.00% | 4.00% |
| 46 | Daima SACCO | 15.00% | 6.50% |
| 47 | Univision SACCO | 14.50% | 8.75% |
| 48 | Dimkes SACCO | 14.00% | 9.00% |
| 49 | Fortunes SACCO | 14.00% | 8.00% |
| 50 | Jamii SACCO | 14.00% | 8.50% |
Note: Rates were declared by respective SACCOS in 2026 for the 2025 financial year.
Source: Compiled from SACCO annual reports, AGM declarations, and public financial disclosures for 2025.
(Note: Rates were declared in 2026 for the 2025 financial year.)
These returns demonstrate a high level of operational efficiency and member value.
When members see these figures, they see the fruits of their patience and sacrifice.
When they hear of a Bill that might jeopardize this autonomy, they respond with fear—and rightfully so.
The Question of Public Participation
A recurring grievance among members is the perception that the Bill was fast-tracked without sufficient public participation.
While the law mandates that stakeholders be consulted, many SACCO members feel that the “consultation” process was either poorly communicated or effectively sidelined.
For a sector that serves 14 million people, legislation should not be a top-down mandate.
It should be a collaborative effort that strengthens governance without breaking the democratic spirit of the movement.
When members feel that their voices were not heard, their suspicion of the motives behind the legislative changes only grows.
The Way Forward
The government is now in a precarious position. While it has successfully debunked the viral “Ksh 1 trillion theft” claim, it has yet to fully win the hearts and minds of the cooperative movement regarding the actual content of the SACCO Societies (Amendment) Bill 2025.
To bridge this trust deficit, the government must move beyond simple denials. It should:
1) Engage Transparently: Organize town halls and forums specifically for SACCO members to explain the rationale behind each clause of the Bill.
2) Amend Contentious Sections: Address the valid concerns regarding management appointments, liquidity controls, and the “Super SACCO” structure.
3) Prioritize Member Autonomy: Ensure that any reforms are designed to support, not suppress, the democratic and autonomous nature of SACCOs.
The cooperative movement in Kenya is a national asset. It represents the collective resilience of 14 million Kenyans who have decided to build their future together.
As Parliament continues its review of the Bill, the message from the members is loud and clear: they are watching, they are concerned, and they demand that their savings—and their right to manage them—be protected above all else.
Do you believe the proposed SACCO Society (Amendment) Bill 2025 strikes the right balance between necessary regulation and protecting member autonomy?
