Liberty Kenya Targets Kenya’s Two Most Under-insured Populations with Dual Product Launch

Liberty Kenya has launched two health insurance products designed to close structural coverage gaps for Kenyans aged 65 to 85 and children aged 4 to 18 in institutional care.

The products, HeriAfya Seniors and HeriAfya Juniors, are regulated by the Insurance Regulatory Authority and represent a deliberate expansion into market segments that conventional underwriting has historically avoided.

The launch arrives against a backdrop of persistently low health insurance uptake. Private health insurance covers only around 4% of Kenya’s population, with the majority of insured individuals relying on the Social Health Authority.

Overall insurance penetration stood at approximately 2.3% of GDP in 2023 according to the IRA and KNBS, well below the global average.

More recently, insurance penetration declined further to 2.2% of GDP as at H1’2025, according to the Q2’2025 IRA and Central Bank of Kenya data, compared to the global average of 7.4% cited in the Allianz Global Insurance Report 2025. The elderly and children in non-family institutional settings remain the most underserved segments within an already underserved market.

HeriAfya Seniors targets Kenyans aged 61 to 85, an age bracket most private insurers decline to underwrite.

The product features age-banded premiums across three tiers, covering individuals aged 61 to 70, 71 to 80, and 81 to 85. Inpatient cover begins at KES 500,000 annually, with a principal member premium of KES 40,500 per year at the entry tier. Cover rises to KES 5,000,000 at the upper end.

Pre-existing and chronic conditions are covered after a 12-month waiting period. The product also includes home care for 30 days following discharge, funeral expense benefits, psychiatry and psychotherapy cover, cancer treatment, and COVID-19 cover.

Spouses are priced at approximately 85% of the principal premium, and child dependents can be added at separate rates, with dependents eligible up to age 23 with proof of full-time schooling.

Outpatient cover is available as an add-on, with annual limits ranging from KES 50,000 to KES 350,000. Flexible premium financing through partner banks allows policyholders to pay in four equal instalments.

HeriAfya Juniors operates on a fundamentally different structure: it is Kenya’s first institutional health cover product for children, with no direct competitor in the market.

Rather than requiring individual parent enrolment, the product places the policy with the institution, whether a school, orphanage, children’s home, or NGO-run child welfare programme, covering groups of 10 or more children aged 4 to 18.

Inpatient premiums start at KES 8,929 per child annually for a KES 500,000 limit, representing less than KES 750 per child per month. Children within the same institution can carry different inpatient limits under a single policy.

Benefits include cancer treatment, HIV/AIDS cover, psychiatry and psychotherapy, organ transplantation, and a Career and Wellness Day offering dedicated events for emotional wellbeing and career guidance at no additional charge. Outpatient cover is available at KES 15,403 per child annually for a KES 50,000 limit.

“Kenya’s institutional sector has grown significantly, and the complexity of healthcare costs has increased in parallel,” said, Rosalyn Mugoh, Managing Director, Heritage Insurance Kenya

“We identified a clear protection gap affecting two of the most vulnerable populations in our society: our elderly, who are routinely excluded from private health cover, and children in institutional care, whose protection has been left to chance. HeriAfya Seniors and HeriAfya Juniors are designed to correct that.”

The economic case for both products is grounded in the unmanaged cost exposure faced by families and institutions.

A cancer diagnosis in Kenya can cost upwards of KES 500,000; a single ICU admission can consume a school’s operating reserves within days.

By converting unpredictable catastrophic liabilities into structured, predictable annual premiums, both products address a financing gap that the public health system cannot fully absorb.

Kenya’s health insurance market was projected to reach a gross written premium of US$448.45 million in 2025, with the sector expected to continue growing steadily through 2030. Liberty Kenya’s dual-product strategy positions the group to capture share in two segments that remain structurally absent from most carriers’ books.

Ends