News
House Helps to Earn Minimum Salary of Sh18,047 Under New Law, Employers Who Refuse Face Jail
For decades, domestic workers in Kenya have formed the invisible workforce that keeps millions of households running. They cook meals, raise children, clean homes, guard compounds and maintain gardens, often for wages that labour activists say have lagged far behind the rising cost of living.
That era is now facing one of its biggest legal shake-ups.
The government has significantly raised the minimum wage for domestic workers, setting a new monthly floor of Sh18,047 for house helps employed in major cities, while employers who fail to comply risk criminal penalties, including imprisonment for up to three months or fines of up to Sh50,000.
The new regulations, formalised through legal notices signed by Labour Cabinet Secretary Alfred Mutua, are part of a broader nationwide wage review that followed President William Ruto’s Labour Day pledge to increase general minimum wages by 12 percent and agricultural wages by 15 percent.
The revised wage order elevates domestic workers into one of the fastest-growing categories under Kenya’s minimum wage framework.
Under the new structure, house helps, gardeners, house servants, sweepers, messengers and day watchmen working in major urban centres including Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Nakuru and Eldoret must receive at least Sh18,047 per month. Workers in municipalities such as Ruiru, Mavoko and Limuru will be entitled to a minimum of Sh16,650, while those in smaller towns and rural areas will earn not less than about Sh9,268.
The increase marks a dramatic rise from a decade ago when some domestic workers legally earned less than Sh10,000 a month. It also reflects mounting pressure on government to protect low-income earners from soaring food prices, transport costs, rent and utility bills.
Kenya’s inflationary pressures have continued to squeeze household budgets, making domestic workers among the groups most vulnerable to economic shocks. Labour officials argue that periodic wage reviews are necessary to ensure workers retain purchasing power as living expenses rise.
Millions of Workers Affected
The stakes are enormous.
Domestic work remains one of Kenya’s largest employment sectors outside farming and informal trade, with estimates suggesting more than two million Kenyans earn a living as house helps, nannies, gardeners, guards and other household staff.
Yet despite the sector’s size, employment relationships often remain informal. Many workers are hired through word-of-mouth arrangements, receive cash payments, lack written contracts and have little documentation to prove employment if disputes arise.
This informality has historically made enforcement of labour laws difficult.
Unlike factories, offices and commercial establishments that can be inspected by labour officers, domestic workers operate behind the gates of private homes, making wage violations harder to detect and prosecute.
Labour rights advocates say this has created a longstanding gap between what the law requires and what many workers actually receive.
Online discussions and labour disputes increasingly reveal workers challenging underpayment and unfair dismissals, signalling growing awareness of employment rights among domestic staff.
New Burden for Households
While workers have welcomed the pay rise, the changes are likely to trigger anxiety among many middle-class households already struggling with the high cost of living.
Families employing multiple workers such as a house help, gardener and watchman could see their monthly wage bills increase substantially if they fully comply with the new regulations.
Critics argue that some households may respond by reducing staff numbers, hiring part-time workers or abandoning domestic help altogether.
Supporters of the wage increase counter that domestic labour should not be built on poverty wages and that employers who cannot afford legal minimums should reconsider their staffing arrangements.
The debate has increasingly played out across Kenyan social media platforms, where discussions over fair compensation for domestic workers have become more prominent amid rising living costs.
More Than Just Salary
The wage increase is only one part of the legal obligations facing employers.
Under Kenyan labour laws, domestic workers are entitled to protections that extend beyond basic pay, including rest days, overtime compensation in certain circumstances, notice before termination and statutory deductions where applicable. Labour experts have repeatedly warned that many employers remain unaware that domestic workers enjoy the same fundamental employment protections as workers in other sectors.
The government has also signalled stronger efforts to improve protections for domestic workers following growing concerns about exploitation, abuse and unsafe working conditions within private homes.
For thousands of house helps across the country, the latest wage order represents more than a salary adjustment. It is an acknowledgement that domestic work is real work and that the people who quietly keep Kenyan households functioning are entitled to the protection of the law.
Whether the new rules translate into actual pay rises for workers, however, will depend on one challenge that has frustrated labour authorities for years: enforcement. With most domestic employment arrangements still hidden behind closed doors, ensuring every worker receives the new minimum wage may prove far more difficult than announcing it.
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