Kenya’s Inflation Problem and the Dollar Alternative
Kenya’s inflation has fluctuated significantly — food prices, energy costs, and a sometimes-volatile shilling have made saving in KES a challenge for anyone without access to sophisticated financial products. For ordinary Kenyans, stablecoins offer something remarkable: a simple way to hold dollar-denominated savings on a phone, accessible via M-Pesa top-ups and withdrawals.
Stablecoins 101: What You Need to Know
A stablecoin is a cryptocurrency with a fixed value, almost always pegged to $1 USD. The two most important ones:
- USDT (Tether) — The most liquid stablecoin in Africa’s P2P markets. If you want to buy, sell, or transfer stablecoins using M-Pesa in Kenya, USDT is the standard. Backed by a mix of cash, T-bills, and other assets.
- USDC (USD Coin) — Issued by Circle, regulated in the US. Reserves are 100% cash and short-term treasuries, audited monthly. Slightly less P2P liquidity in Kenya than USDT, but growing and considered more transparent.
Buying USDT in Kenya: The M-Pesa Route
This is straightforward once you’ve done it once:
- Create an account on OKX or Bybit
- Go to P2P → Buy USDT → Filter by KES payment method: M-Pesa
- Choose a verified merchant (200+ trades, 98%+ completion)
- Enter amount, send KES via M-Pesa to merchant’s number, receive USDT
The spread (effectively your transaction fee) is typically 1–1.5% of the trade value. No other hidden charges.
Earning Yield on Your Stablecoins
Simply holding USDT already beats KES inflation in dollar terms. But you can go further:
- OKX Earn: 4–7% APY on flexible USDT. No lock-up. Check OKX Earn rates.
- Bybit Earn: 4–6% flexible, 8–12%+ locked. Explore Bybit Earn.
- Bitget Earn: Bitget occasionally runs promotional rates — worth a comparison.
Practical example: KES 100,000 → approximately $750 USDT → at 5% APY → $37.50/year yield. If KES depreciates 10% over the year, your savings in shilling terms are worth KES 110,000 at year-end (before yield). Combined: you’re ahead even if you do nothing else.
Understanding the Risks
- Depegging risk: Both USDT and USDC have historically maintained their $1 peg. USDC had a brief $0.87 dip in March 2023 during Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse, but recovered within 48 hours. Diversifying across both reduces this risk.
- Exchange risk: Stablecoins held on an exchange are subject to that exchange’s solvency. Use only well-established platforms (OKX, Bybit) and don’t concentrate all holdings in one place.
- KRA tax implications: Kenya Revenue Authority has been developing crypto tax guidance. Keep records of purchases and sales for potential reporting requirements.
Practical Recommendation for Kenyan Savers
Start with USDT on OKX or Bybit. Convert an amount you’re comfortable with — perhaps the equivalent of 1–3 months’ savings — and put it in Earn. Leave it. Check back in three months. The experience of watching dollar-denominated savings grow while KES prices rise is clarifying. It’s a strategy more Kenyans should know about.
























