Buying a car is often treated as a one-time financial decision. You identify a vehicle within your budget, negotiate the price, arrange payment, transfer ownership, and drive home. Once the keys are in your hands, it can feel as though the largest expense is behind you.
In reality, the purchase price is only the beginning. The true cost of owning a car in Kenya includes fuel, insurance, servicing, repairs, tyres, parking, financing, depreciation, and many smaller expenses that are easy to overlook. Individually, some may not appear significant. Combined over several years, however, they can exceed what a buyer expected to spend. This is why two cars with similar purchase prices can have very different ownership costs.
Fuel is usually the most visible expense because motorists pay for it regularly. Yet many buyers underestimate how much their normal driving routine will require. A vehicle that consumes one litre of fuel every eight kilometres will cost considerably more to operate than one returning 15 or 20 kilometres per litre, particularly for someone commuting daily or travelling frequently between towns.
Traffic also matters. A short commute in Nairobi may consume more fuel than its distance suggests because the vehicle spends time idling, accelerating, and braking in congestion. Air-conditioning, heavy loads, tyre pressure, driving style, and mechanical condition can further affect consumption.
Before buying, estimate how many kilometres you are likely to drive each month and use realistic fuel-economy figures rather than relying entirely on manufacturer claims. Our guide on What Fuel Economy Do Car Owners Actually Get? explains why real-world consumption often differs from figures recorded under controlled test conditions.
Insurance is another major cost that buyers sometimes leave until the final stage. Every vehicle used on public roads requires at least third-party insurance. Many owners of newer or higher-value vehicles choose comprehensive cover because it can protect against risks such as accidental damage, theft, and fire, subject to the policy terms.
Comprehensive premiums are generally influenced by the vehicle’s value, type, age, intended use, repair costs, risk profile, and the insurer’s pricing. A small hatchback and a large luxury SUV may therefore attract very different premiums even when both are used privately.
The premium is not the only figure worth checking. Policy excesses, valuation costs, optional benefits, tracking requirements, and limits on services such as towing or windscreen replacement may also affect the amount an owner eventually pays.
Servicing is more predictable, but it is still frequently underestimated. Routine maintenance includes engine oil, filters, fluids, spark plugs, brake components, and other items that wear with time and mileage. The cost depends on the vehicle, the quality of parts used, and the service interval.
A Toyota Vitz, Mazda Demio, or Toyota Axio will generally cost less to service than a large SUV or premium European vehicle. Larger engines may require more oil, while specialised filters, electronic systems, and model-specific parts can increase maintenance costs.
Skipping servicing may reduce expenses temporarily, but it often creates larger bills later. Old engine oil, neglected coolant, worn brake components, and delayed transmission maintenance can shorten the life of expensive mechanical systems.
Repairs are different from routine servicing because they are less predictable. Even a reliable vehicle will eventually require replacement parts. Suspension bushes wear out, shock absorbers weaken, batteries fail, engine mounts deteriorate, sensors develop faults, and air-conditioning systems may need attention. Kenyan road conditions can accelerate wear on tyres and suspension components, particularly for vehicles regularly driven on rough roads or over poorly designed speed bumps.
The age of a vehicle also matters. A well-maintained older car may remain dependable, but rubber seals, hoses, electrical components, and suspension parts naturally deteriorate over time. Buyers should therefore avoid assuming that a reliable model will require no repairs.
Tyres are among the easiest costs to forget because they are not purchased every month. When replacement time arrives, however, buying four good-quality tyres can be a substantial expense. Larger SUVs and vehicles fitted with low-profile or uncommon tyre sizes generally cost more to equip than compact cars using widely available sizes.
Choosing the cheapest tyres available may reduce the immediate bill, but tyres directly affect braking, grip, ride quality, and safety. Their cost should be included in the ownership budget rather than treated as an unexpected emergency.
Parking can also become a meaningful monthly expense, particularly in Nairobi and other major towns. A motorist may pay for parking at work, shopping centres, hospitals, entertainment venues, or residential buildings. Some people also need to rent secure overnight parking because their homes do not provide enough space. A small daily parking charge may appear insignificant, but repeated throughout the month it becomes part of the real cost of using the vehicle.
Security brings additional expenses. Depending on the vehicle and insurance requirements, an owner may need a tracking device, alarm system, steering lock, secure parking, or other anti-theft measures. Some of these involve installation fees and recurring subscription charges.
Cleaning and cosmetic care also add up. Car washes, interior cleaning, polishing, minor paint repairs, replacement mats, and small accessories are rarely included in the original ownership budget. None may be especially expensive alone, but frequent spending can become significant over time.
For buyers using vehicle financing, the cost of credit may be one of the largest expenses of all. The amount paid for a financed car is not simply its advertised price. Interest, processing charges, insurance requirements, valuation fees, and other financing costs can substantially increase the total amount repaid.
A manageable monthly instalment does not necessarily mean the vehicle is affordable. The buyer must still pay for fuel, insurance, maintenance, parking, and repairs while servicing the loan. This is where some motorists become financially stretched. The instalment consumes most of the transport budget, leaving little room for proper maintenance or unexpected repairs.
Depreciation is another major cost, although it does not appear as a monthly bill. Most vehicles lose value as they age and accumulate mileage. If you buy a car for KSh 2 million and later sell it for KSh 1.4 million, the KSh 600,000 difference is part of what ownership cost you.
Some models retain value better because they have strong demand, established reliability, readily available spare parts, and broad acceptance in the used-car market. Others depreciate more quickly because buyers are concerned about maintenance costs, fuel consumption, parts availability, or long-term reliability. This does not mean resale value should determine every purchase. A vehicle should first meet the owner’s needs. However, depreciation matters when comparing the long-term cost of different options.
There is also the cost of unexpected events. A puncture, cracked windscreen, damaged suspension component, towing charge, lost key, minor collision, or sudden battery failure can disrupt even a carefully planned budget. Vehicles do not schedule repairs around payday. Maintaining an emergency vehicle fund can prevent a mechanical problem from turning into a financial crisis. Setting aside a small amount regularly is often easier than finding a large sum when an urgent repair becomes necessary.
The true cost of ownership also includes time. A vehicle that repeatedly breaks down may lead to missed work, delayed business appointments, alternative transport costs, and hours spent looking for parts or visiting garages. Reliability therefore has financial value even when it is difficult to calculate. This is why the cheapest car to buy is not always the cheapest car to own.
Before buying, create a realistic monthly ownership budget. Include fuel, insurance, servicing, repairs, tyres, parking, security, loan repayments where applicable, and a reserve for unexpected expenses. Then ask an important question: after paying for the car, can you still afford to maintain it properly?
If the answer is uncertain, choosing a smaller, simpler, or more economical vehicle may be the wiser decision. There is little benefit in owning an impressive car that spends most of its time parked because fuel, insurance, or repairs have become unaffordable.
At Iko Gari, we believe affordability should be measured beyond the showroom price. A good vehicle should fit not only your purchase budget but also your everyday life. Buying a car changes how you move, work, travel, and manage your time. But the best purchase is not necessarily the most expensive vehicle you can afford to buy. It is the one you can comfortably fuel, insure, maintain, repair, and keep on the road for years.

