Liberty Kenya Holdings leaned on stronger investment fee income and strict cost control to cushion the impact of rising claims, which impacted the group’s profitability in the first half of 2025. The results were also impacted by the accounting impact of the disposal of Heritage Insurance Tanzania.
The group posted net earnings of KES260 million, a 59% drop from KES632 million in the same period last year. The decline was mainly due to an increase in motor and medical claims in the general insurance business, as well as higher group risk claims and a stronger reserving basis in the life business.
The group’s net insurance service result fell by 61% to KES225 million, compared to KES577 million a year earlier, showing the impact of the higher claims burden.
However, Liberty Kenya recorded stronger investment returns, with net investment income rising by 5% to KES2.08 billion, up from KES1.99 billion in June 2024. On the other hand, net insurance finance expenses rose by 12% to KES1.25 billion, further straining earnings.
Basic earnings per share (EPS) for continuing operations, dropped to KES0.80, down 30% from KES1.14 last year. The group’s total assets stood at KShs 45.3 billion, almost unchanged from KES45.2 billion in June 2024.
During the period, Liberty Kenya also completed the sale of Heritage Insurance Tanzania (HIT) in April 2025, earning KES503 million net proceeds after capital gains tax.
“Even though higher claims reduced our earnings, our strong investment performance, good expense control, and solid capital base helped us stay resilient. We are now looking forward to launching fully digital life insurance solutions later this year, which will improve customer experience and strengthen our position in the market,” said Group CEO Kieran Godden.
The board noted that while lower interest rates and inflation below 7.5 percent signal improved economic conditions, households continue to feel the pressure of reduced disposable income, tight credit, fiscal challenges, and climate change risks.
Looking ahead, Liberty Kenya said that while new business growth is likely to remain subdued, the Group will focus on margin improvement and capital efficiency.
All Group entities remain well-capitalised, above both regulatory and internal capital requirements, ensuring continued financial strength and flexibility.
The Board has not declared an interim dividend for the period.






