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Buying land with your spouse, family, or chama? Learn the legal structures, avoid future disputes, and discover LANDOA the joint ownership solution for couples. Read more.
You have found the perfect piece of land. The price is good. The location works. But you are not buying alone. You are buying with your spouse, your brother, or your chama.
Now what?
Joint land ownership in Kenya is common. Couples buy together. Families pool resources. Investment groups buy land for future subdivision.
But if you don’t structure it properly, you can face serious problems later. Disputes over shares, difficulty selling, inheritance issues, and even court cases.
At Nyota Njema Real Estate, we help all kinds of buyers purchase land safely. We have seen joint ownership work beautifully and we have seen it fail.
This guide covers everything you need to know. We explain the legal structures. We give you a step-by-step process. We also introduce LANDOA our special product designed to protect married couples investing together.
Whether you are in Nairobi or abroad, read this before you sign anything.
There are two main types of joint land ownership in Kenya: joint tenancy and tenancy in common.
Joint tenancy is common for married couples. It includes the right of survivorship.
Tenancy in common is better for families and chamas. Each person owns a specific share.
Always put the ownership structure in writing before you pay.
For chamas, register as a group and open a joint bank account.
Diaspora buyers can be part of joint ownership with a power of attorney.
LANDOA helps married couples buy land together with both names on the title for protection and transparency.
Buying land together has many benefits:
Pool resources: You can afford a larger or better-located plot.
Shared responsibility: Costs and risks are spread.
Family legacy: Land becomes a shared inheritance.
But without clear rules, joint ownership can lead to:
Disagreements over how to use the land.
One person wanting to sell while others don’t.
Inheritance disputes when an owner dies.
Difficulty getting loans or approvals.
The key is to choose the right legal structure from the start.
Kenyan law recognizes two main ways to own land jointly.
This is the default for married couples buying together. Under joint tenancy:
All owners own the land together as one unit. No one has a specific share.
If one owner dies, their interest automatically passes to the surviving owner(s). This is called the right of survivorship.
You cannot sell your share without the consent of all other owners.
Best for: Married couples who want the land to stay with the survivor.
Under tenancy in common:
Each owner has a specific, divisible share (e.g., 50%, 30%, 20%).
Shares can be sold or inherited independently.
There is no right of survivorship. When an owner dies, their share passes to their heirs, not the other owners.
Best for: Unmarried partners, families buying together, chamas, and investors.
| Feature | Joint Tenancy | Tenancy in Common |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | Whole unit together | Specific shares |
| Right of Survivorship | Yes | No |
| Can sell share alone | No | Yes |
| Inheritance | Passes to survivors | Passes to heirs |
| Best for | Married couples | Families, chamas, investors |
Nunua Shamba, Jenga Ndoa.
In Kenya, billions of shillings in assets go unclaimed every year because spouses were unaware of each other’s investments. This is why LANDOA was created.
LANDOA is a product of Nyota Njema Real Estate. It is more than just a title deed. It is a shield for your partner and children against greedy relatives and financial uncertainty.
| Benefit | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Joint Protection | Both spouses’ names on the title deed. If the unthinkable happens, the survivor is legally protected. |
| Faster Growth | Couples who pool funds reach investment goals 2x faster than those saving individually. |
| Trust & Transparency | No hidden assets. Investing together builds honesty in the marriage. |
| The Ultimate Gift | Flowers wither. Gifting your partner land lasts generations. |
| Generational Wealth | Redirect birthday party funds into a plot to gift your child on their 18th birthday. |
Married Couples: Looking to build a home or a portfolio together.
Parents: Intentional about their children’s future.
Individuals (30+): Choosing to practice self-love through long-term security.
LANDOA is not just for couples. It is also for those choosing to invest in themselves:
Widowed or single over 30/40: Use this as a gesture of self-love and independence.
Goal: Secure your own retirement and peace of mind, ensuring you are never a burden to others.
Develop: Build residential apartments, a family home, or a boutique hotel.
Agribusiness: Engage in farming for extra family income.
Retire: Secure a serene location to settle down after years of hard work.
With LANDOA, you are not just buying land. You are building a legacy for your loved ones.
Several laws affect joint land ownership:
Married Women’s Property Act (1882): Allows married women to own and dispose of property separately.
Matrimonial Property Act (2013): Governs property acquired during marriage. Both spouses have equal rights regardless of whose name is on the title.
Law of Succession Act (Cap 160): Determines how property passes when an owner dies.
Land Registration Act (2012): Provides for joint registration and the distinction between joint tenancy and tenancy in common.
Important: Even if a married couple buys land in one spouse’s name, the other spouse still has a legal interest. Many banks and the Ministry of Lands now require both spouses to consent to a sale. This is why LANDOA ensures both names are on the title from the start.
Before you even look at land, agree on how you will own it.
Married couples: LANDOA is designed for you. Both names go on the title. Joint tenancy is standard.
Family members: Tenancy in common works best. Each person’s share is clear.
Chamas: Tenancy in common or ownership through a registered company/cooperative.
Verbal agreements are dangerous. Put everything in writing.
What the agreement should cover:
Names of all parties and their shares (percentages).
How payments will be made (who pays what, when).
Who holds the title deed? (Joint names or one person?)
How decisions will be made (e.g., majority vote).
What happens if someone wants to sell their share.
Process for resolving disputes.
What happens if someone dies.
For married couples using LANDOA, this agreement can be simpler but still important.
If you are buying as a chama, it is safer to register the group as a legal entity.
Options:
Self-help group (SHG): Registered with the Ministry of Cooperatives.
Company: Register a company limited by guarantee or shares.
Cooperative society: Formal but more complex.
A registered group can open a bank account and hold land in its name.
For joint ownership, a dedicated bank account helps track payments.
For couples, a joint account with both names.
For chamas, a group account with signatories.
Use this account for deposits, installment payments, and related expenses.
Before paying, verify the title deed at the Ministry of Lands. This confirms the seller is the true owner and there are no caveats.
We do this for you at Nyota Njema.
The sale agreement should list all joint owners. If the land is to be held in joint tenancy, the agreement must state that clearly. If tenancy in common, specify the shares.
Always have a lawyer review the agreement.
The transfer documents will be registered at the Ministry of Lands. The new title deed will show the names of all owners and the type of ownership.
For joint tenancy: The title will say “as joint tenants” and list all names.
For tenancy in common: The title will show each owner’s share (e.g., “A – 50%, B – 30%, C – 20%”).
After purchase, keep:
Copy of the title deed.
Written agreement among owners.
Receipts for payments.
Minutes of meetings (for chamas).

Here is a simple structure for a chama land buying agreement. Use it as a starting point with your lawyer.
CHAMA LAND PURCHASE AGREEMENT Date: [Date] Members: [List all members and their ID numbers] 1. OBJECTIVE The group agrees to purchase [plot description, location, LR No.] from [seller] at [price]. 2. SHARES Each member shall own the following percentage/share: - [Name 1]: [%] - [Name 2]: [%] - [Name 3]: [%] 3. PAYMENTS Total purchase price: Ksh [amount] Deposit: Ksh [amount] due by [date] Balance: Ksh [amount] due by [date] Payments to be made into the group account: [account details] 4. TITLE DEED The land shall be registered in the names of all members as tenants in common with their respective shares as stated. 5. DECISION MAKING All major decisions (sale, lease, development) shall require a [%] majority vote. 6. SALE OF SHARES A member may sell their share only after offering it to other members at fair market value. If no member buys within 30 days, the member may sell to an external party with group consent. 7. DISPUTE RESOLUTION Any dispute shall first be referred to a group committee. If unresolved, the parties shall submit to arbitration under the Arbitration Act. 8. DEATH OF A MEMBER Upon the death of a member, their share shall pass to their heirs. The heirs become members of the chama. 9. GOVERNING LAW This agreement is governed by the laws of Kenya. Signed: [All members]
If you live abroad and want to buy land jointly with your spouse, family, or a chama, you can still participate.
How it works:
You can be listed on the title deed even if you are not in Kenya.
You can authorize a family member or the chama to act on your behalf using a power of attorney.
All payments should go through the group’s joint bank account.
You can participate in virtual meetings and receive documents via email or the Nyota App.
For married couples abroad: LANDOA is ideal. Both spouses can be listed on the title, ensuring protection no matter where you live.
Important: Ensure the power of attorney is specific to the land transaction and properly executed at the Kenyan embassy or a commissioner of oaths.
At Nyota Njema, we assist diaspora clients in joint ownership arrangements. We handle the documentation and keep you updated remotely.
Verbal promises lead to disputes. Always put it in writing.
If only one person’s name is on the title, the others have no legal protection. For chamas, this is risky. For couples, LANDOA solves this by ensuring both names are on the title.
With tenancy in common, you must specify percentages. If not, the law presumes equal shares, which may not reflect what was intended.
Without a joint bank account, it is hard to prove who paid what. Use a dedicated account for transparency.
What happens when one owner dies? If you have joint tenancy, it passes to survivors. If tenancy in common, it passes to heirs. Discuss this early.
A: Joint tenancy means all owners own the land together as one unit. If one dies, the land automatically passes to the survivors. Tenancy in common means each owner has a specific share that can be sold or inherited independently.
A: LANDOA is a product of Nyota Njema Real Estate designed for married couples. It ensures both spouses’ names are on the title deed, protecting the survivor and building trust through transparency.
A: Yes, but the other spouse still has a legal interest under the Matrimonial Property Act. For a sale, both spouses must consent. LANDOA avoids complications by putting both names on the title from the start.
A: The sale agreement and transfer documents must specify the type of ownership. The title deed will then reflect that.
A: Tenancy in common is simplest. For larger groups, consider registering as a company or cooperative to hold the land.
A: Yes. They can sign a power of attorney and be listed on the title deed. We help with virtual coordination.
A: Under tenancy in common, they can sell, but it’s best to have a written agreement that gives first right of refusal to the other owners.
A: The written agreement should include a dispute resolution clause. Mediation or arbitration is cheaper and faster than court.
A: You can, but it is risky. A simple agreement can prevent future disagreements.
A: Yes. A lawyer ensures the sale agreement and title transfer correctly reflect the ownership structure you want.
A: Under joint tenancy, it passes to survivors. Under tenancy in common, each share passes to the deceased’s heirs.
A: Yes. We help diaspora couples invest together with both names on the title, using virtual tours and remote documentation.
At Nyota Njema Real Estate, we help couples, families, and chamas buy land with confidence.
We offer:
Verified land: All properties are checked for clean title.
LANDOA: Our special product for married couples ensures both names are on the title.
Clear documentation: We ensure your joint ownership structure is reflected in all legal papers.
Group-friendly payment plans: Flexible terms for chamas.
Diaspora support: Virtual tours, power of attorney guidance, and remote updates.
Nyota App: Track your investment, share documents, and communicate with your group.
Our Promise:
We make joint land ownership simple and safe. Whether you are two people or twenty, we guide you through every step.
Don’t leave your joint investment to chance. Let Nyota Njema help you find the right land and structure your ownership properly.
For couples: Ask us about LANDOA—the smart way to invest together with both names on the title.
Contact Us Today:
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Talk to our diaspora team
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