Send money from Botswana to Kenya
A shortlist of providers verified to serve this route — including straight to M-Pesa — and exactly how the money reaches Kenya.
Our comparison engine doesn't price Botswana-origin transfers yet. Instead, here's a shortlist of providers verified to move money on this corridor — confirm their live rate and fee on their own site before you send.
Indicative options · not a live quote
Sending money from Botswana to Kenya
Our live price comparison can't quote Botswana-origin transfers yet, but money genuinely moves on this route. There's a small, established Kenyan community in Botswana — many working in health, education and professional services — and money flows home regularly. The providers below are verified to serve the corridor, and several pay straight into the recipient's M-Pesa wallet. Rates and fees are set by each provider and must be confirmed on their own site before you send.
| Provider | Payout method | Speed | |
|---|---|---|---|
| M-Pesa wallet, bank deposit or cash collection | Minutes to same day | Visit site | |
| M-Pesa wallet, bank deposit or cash pickup | Minutes to same day | Visit site | |
| Bank deposit, mobile wallet or cash pickup | Minutes to same day | Visit site |
Most money sent from Botswana to Kenya arrives straight in the recipient's M-Pesa mobile wallet, usually within minutes — all you need is their full name and Kenyan mobile number. Money can also go to a Kenyan bank account or be collected as cash. The headline fee is only part of the picture — what really decides the cost is the margin added to the exchange rate, so always compare the shillings that actually arrive, not just the upfront fee.
Why Botswana to Kenya shows no live prices yet
Currency Expert's live comparison engine prices transfers that start in the UK and a handful of other major sending countries, where the providers we connect to operate. None of those providers currently quote transfers that start in Botswana, so the route comes back empty even though real services move money on it every day.
Until we can pull live Botswana rates, this page lists providers verified to serve the corridor rather than a live price table. Treat the page as a shortlist, not a quote — and always confirm the rate and fee on the provider's own site before you commit.
How the money reaches Kenya
By far the most common way to receive money in Kenya is M-Pesa, the mobile-money service almost everyone uses. Money sent from Botswana is credited straight to the recipient's M-Pesa wallet, usually within minutes — you just need their full name and Kenyan mobile number. Money can also go to a bank account (over the instant PesaLink network or by SWIFT) or be collected as cash at an agent.
M-Pesa is near-instant; bank deposits over SWIFT can take one to five business days, while local PesaLink transfers are much faster. Kenya does not use the IBAN system — for a bank deposit you need the account number and bank name.
What sending money to Kenya really costs
This is a thin, lightly served corridor, so the headline fee is only part of the cost — the bigger number is usually hidden inside the exchange rate. Here's where each slice goes.
The exchange-rate margin
The gap between the real mid-market rate and the rate you're offered. On a lightly traded pair like the Botswana pula to Kenyan shilling, the margin can be wider than on major currencies — often a couple of percent or more. On any transfer this usually outweighs the upfront fee, so compare the shillings that actually arrive.
Botswana's pula is freely convertible
Botswana abolished exchange controls in 1999, so there's no official-versus-street-rate gap — but the pula, managed on a crawling peg to a currency basket, still moves against the Kenyan shilling. Compare what arrives in Kenyan shillings across two or three providers on the day you send.
Intermediary-bank fees
Bank-to-bank SWIFT transfers can lose money to intermediary banks along the way. Services that pay out to M-Pesa or over Kenya's local rails usually avoid this entirely.
Tax and rules on each side
Sending from Botswana
Botswana does not levy a specific tax on money you send abroad as family support or a gift. It abolished exchange controls in 1999 and the pula is freely convertible, so personal remittances flow freely through licensed providers overseen by the Bank of Botswana. Send with a valid Omang (national ID) or passport.
Receiving in Kenya
Kenya does not tax personal or family remittances — money sent to support family or as a gift isn't treated as income. All money-transfer providers must be licensed by the Central Bank of Kenya, so stick to regulated services and avoid informal "hawala" arrangements. Very large transfers may need supporting documents on the Kenyan side.
Funding your transfer without overpaying
Paying from a Botswana bank account or by mobile money (such as Orange Money, Mascom MyZaka or Smega) is usually the cheapest way to fund a transfer. Funding with a credit card is often treated by the card issuer as a cash advance, which can trigger a one-off fee and interest from day one with no grace period — quietly making a cheap-looking transfer expensive. Check how your card treats the payment before you use it, and have your Omang to hand for the identity check.
Scams to watch on this route
People receiving money from abroad are a common target for fraud. These few rules are worth keeping in mind before you send.
Land and property fraud
Rule: a common trap. Never pay for land or property on the strength of photos or a title deed alone — have a trusted person or lawyer verify ownership at the land registry in person before any money moves.
"Guaranteed return" investments
Rule: be very wary of schemes promising high, guaranteed returns, fake forex or crypto platforms, or anything spread through a WhatsApp group. If it sounds too good to be true, it is.
Family "emergency" requests
Rule: an urgent request for money that appears to come from a relative or official may be an impersonator. Confirm directly on a number you already know before sending anything.
Confirm before you send
Rule: check the recipient's name and M-Pesa number against details they sent you in writing, and use a verified provider rather than a stranger offering a "better rate" off-platform.
How most people send money from Botswana to Kenya
For most people sending money from Botswana to Kenya, the simplest route is a verified provider paying straight into the recipient's M-Pesa wallet — fast, familiar and easy to confirm. Because we can't show a live quote here yet, treat this page as a vetted shortlist — then judge each option by the shillings that actually arrive after the rate margin, and confirm the recipient's M-Pesa number before you send.
Botswana to Kenya transfers: frequently asked questions
Our live comparison engine prices transfers that start in the UK and a few other major sending countries. It doesn't yet quote transfers that start in Botswana, so instead of an empty table we list providers verified to serve the corridor. Confirm the live rate and fee on each provider's own site before you send.
Yes. Several providers on this route pay straight into the recipient's M-Pesa wallet, usually within minutes — including Mukuru and Western Union. You just need the recipient's full name (as registered on M-Pesa) and their Kenyan mobile number. It's the fastest and most familiar way for most people to receive money in Kenya.
For M-Pesa, the recipient's full name and Kenyan mobile number (with the +254 country code). For a bank deposit, their full name, bank name and account number — Kenya does not use IBANs. For cash pickup, their name and a reference number. You'll also need your own valid ID — an Omang (national ID) or passport — to send.
M-Pesa and cash pickups are usually available within minutes. Bank deposits can be instant over Kenya's local PesaLink network, or take one to five business days if routed by SWIFT. The provider will show an estimated delivery time before you confirm.
On a lightly traded pair like this, most of the cost hides in the exchange-rate margin rather than the upfront fee — so compare the shillings that actually arrive. Botswana does not tax money you send abroad as a gift or family support, and Kenya does not tax remittances received, so your recipient keeps the full amount that arrives.
Paying from a Botswana bank account or by mobile money (such as Orange Money, Mascom MyZaka or Smega) is usually cheapest. Avoid funding with a credit card where you can — issuers often treat it as a cash advance, adding a one-off fee and interest from day one. And always compare the exchange-rate margin, not just the upfront fee, since the margin is where most of the cost hides.
Use a provider licensed by the relevant authorities — every provider listed here is regulated. Money-transfer firms are overseen by the Bank of Botswana on the sending side and must be licensed by the Central Bank of Kenya on the receiving side. Informal "hawala" arrangements may look cheaper but carry no protection if something goes wrong. Always confirm the recipient's M-Pesa number in writing before you send.
Our sources & how we keep this current
Last reviewed: 1 July 2026. We re-check the providers and rules on this corridor regularly, and will switch this page to a live price table as soon as our engine can quote Botswana-origin transfers.
Affiliate disclosure: the "Visit site" links to some providers are affiliate links. Currency Expert may earn a commission, at no cost to you, if you open an account through them. It never changes which providers we list or the order they appear in.