💰 Salary Advice

How to Negotiate Your Salary
in Kenya — Without Losing the Offer

Most Kenyan job seekers accept the first number they are given. This guide shows you how to professionally counter-offer and get what you deserve.

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A survey of 500 Kenyan professionals found that 73% had never negotiated a salary offer — and of those who did, 85% received a higher offer. The fear of losing the job by asking for more is almost always unfounded. Employers expect negotiation.

The 5 Rules of Salary Negotiation in Kenya

1. Never Give a Number First

When asked your expected salary early in the process, deflect politely. The first person to give a number is usually at a disadvantage.

"I want to make sure I understand the full scope of the role before discussing a number. Could you share the budgeted range for this position?"

2. Research Before You Walk In

Use our Kenya Salary Guide 2025, BrighterMonday, MyJobMag and LinkedIn Salary Insights to know your market rate. Go into the negotiation with a specific range backed by data.

3. Always Negotiate the Written Offer

When you receive a written offer, you have the most leverage. At this point the employer has invested time selecting you. A professional counter-offer is expected.

"Thank you so much for this offer — I am genuinely excited about joining the team. Based on my research of market rates for this role and my [X years] of experience in [area], I was hoping we could discuss a package closer to KES [X]. Is there flexibility there?"

4. Negotiate the Total Package — Not Just Base Salary

If the base salary is fixed, negotiate: medical cover for dependants, pension contribution, performance bonus structure, extra leave days, fuel or transport allowance, or a 3-month salary review clause.

5. Get Everything in Writing

Whatever is agreed verbally must be in the written contract before you resign from your current job. "We'll sort it out when you join" is not acceptable in Kenya's job market.

🎯 The Magic Script

After receiving a verbal offer: pause, smile, and say: "That's an exciting offer. I'm very interested. Can I have 24 hours to review it?" This one sentence alone gives you negotiating power — you are not desperate, and they already want you.

What NOT to Say During Salary Negotiation in Kenya