Work out how much to save for your child's school and university fees in Kenya. Education fund plans from about KSh 3,000 a month with life cover built in, sized to beat 8–10% annual fee inflation.

from
KSh 3,000/month
An education fund plan in Kenya lets you build a guaranteed fund for school or university fees from about KSh 3,000 a month, with life cover built in so the plan continues even if the paying parent dies. Because school fees rise faster than ordinary inflation — commonly 8–10% a year — the earlier you start, the less you pay each month. As a rough guide, saving KSh 3,000/month from a child's birth for 18 years contributes about KSh 648,000, which a with-profits plan projects to grow toward KSh 1,000,000 by university entry. Tell us your child's age and fee target on WhatsApp and we calculate the exact monthly contribution and compare plans.
School fees are one of the largest and most predictable expenses a Kenyan family faces — and they rise faster than almost anything else, commonly 8–10% a year. An education fund plan turns that future bill into an affordable monthly contribution today, with one crucial difference from an ordinary savings account: life cover is built in, so if the paying parent dies, the plan does not collapse — premiums are waived and the fund still matures in full for the child.
Use this page to size the plan. The monthly figure depends on three things: how far away the fees are (a newborn has 18 years to save; a Class 6 pupil has far less), the target (boarding secondary, public university, or a private institution), and the growth rate. As an illustration, saving KSh 3,000 a month from birth for 18 years contributes about KSh 648,000, which a with-profits plan projects to grow toward KSh 1,000,000 by university entry. All figures here are illustrative placeholders — actual contributions and projected maturity values depend on the insurer, the plan, and prevailing bonus rates. Send us the child's age and your fee target on WhatsApp and we will calculate the exact monthly contribution and compare plans.
A guaranteed maturity payout timed to a chosen milestone (Form 1, Form 4, or university entry)
Premium waiver if the paying parent dies or is permanently disabled — the plan continues and still matures
Annual reversionary bonuses added to the fund (with-profits plans)
Life cover on the contributing parent for the full savings term
Optional anticipated (staged) payouts matched to each school stage
Surrender or paid-up value after a minimum period (typically 2–3 years)
Parents of newborns and young children with the longest runway to save
Parents of older children wanting a disciplined, ring-fenced top-up before fees hit
Grandparents funding a grandchild's education
Self-employed parents with no payroll savings discipline
Anyone who wants the fund protected if the breadwinner dies before fees are due
Each profile is rated and underwritten differently. Talk to us so we can match your specific situation.
The cheapest route — the longest compounding runway. ~KSh 3,000/month from birth illustratively builds toward ~KSh 1M by university entry. Best for a full-university target.
A common starting point. A shorter horizon means a higher monthly contribution for the same target — typically two to three times the from-birth figure for the same fund.
Pays out in tranches matched to Form 1, Form 4, and university entry, so cash arrives exactly when each fee is due rather than as one lump sum.
Seed the plan with a single premium (e.g. from a bonus) and add a smaller monthly top-up. Useful where you have some capital now but want disciplined ongoing saving.
Parents start at the child's birth with KSh 3,000/month. Over 18 years they contribute about KSh 648,000; with bonuses a with-profits plan projects a maturity value approaching KSh 1,000,000, released as the child enters university. If a parent dies in year 7, premiums stop but the full projected maturity value is still paid — that is the difference between a plan and a savings account.
A parent of a 10-year-old has roughly 8 years to a university target. To reach a similar fund, the monthly contribution is materially higher than the from-birth figure — the calculator shows the trade-off so the family can pick a realistic target and contribution they can sustain.
An anticipated plan releases a tranche at Form 1, another at Form 4, and the balance at university entry. Cash flow lines up with the actual peak fee periods, so the family is not forced to find lump sums from current income at each transition.
Disability premium waiver on the contributing parent
Critical illness rider on the parent
Family income benefit on death of the parent
Single-premium top-up contributions
Joint-life cover (both parents)
Beneficiary substitution flexibility
Availability varies by underwriter. Our advisors will confirm what is available on your chosen policy.
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