Sports contracts in Kenya govern the legal relationships between athletes, clubs, agents, sponsors, and governing bodies across football, athletics, rugby, basketball, and other sports. As Kenyan sport professionalises and commercial opportunities grow, well-drafted sports contracts have become essential for protecting the interests of all parties and providing a clear framework for resolving disputes. Whether you are a club, an athlete, an agent, or a sponsor, understanding the legal elements of sports contracts in Kenya is fundamental to operating successfully in the Kenyan sports sector.
Sports Contracts Kenya: The Legal Framework Governing Player and Club Agreements
Sports contracts in Kenya are primarily governed by the general law of contract, the Law of Contract Act (Cap 23), the Employment Act 2007, and the common law of contract applicable in Kenya. The Sports Act 2013 provides the institutional framework for sports governance in Kenya, establishing the Sports Kenya authority and the Sports Disputes Tribunal (SDT) as the primary forum for resolving sports-related disputes. Sport-specific rules set by national federations, the Confederation of African Football (CAF), the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), and other international governing bodies also form part of the contractual framework in many sports.
Player Employment Contracts
A player engaged by a professional club in Kenya is an employee for the purposes of the Employment Act 2007, regardless of how the contract is titled. The player employment contract must therefore comply with the minimum standards of the Employment Act including terms relating to remuneration, annual leave, medical benefits, and termination procedures.
Key Terms in Player Contracts
A comprehensive player employment contract in Kenya should address the contract term and renewal options; remuneration including basic salary, bonuses (signing-on fee, performance bonuses, appearance fees), and benefits such as accommodation and transport; the player’s obligations including availability for training and matches, compliance with club rules, and restrictions on other sporting and commercial activities; the club’s obligations including payment obligations, provision of training facilities, and medical care; image rights and commercial exploitation of the player’s likeness; transfer provisions including the club’s right to transfer the player and the player’s right to seek a move; and dispute resolution mechanisms.
Image Rights Agreements
Elite Kenyan athletes, particularly Olympic athletes and international footballers, often enter into separate image rights agreements governing the commercial exploitation of their name, image, likeness, and personality. These agreements are distinct from the playing or employment contract and are typically structured through a personal services company to which the athlete assigns their image rights. The image rights company then licences these rights to the club, sponsors, and commercial partners. This structure has commercial and tax planning advantages that should be considered with specialist legal and tax advice.
Agent Representation Agreements
Sports agents in Kenya represent athletes in contract negotiations, commercial deal-making, and career management. An agent representation agreement sets out the scope of the agent’s authority, the commission rate (typically 5-10% of the player’s earnings from contracts procured by the agent), the duration of the representation, and the terms on which the relationship may be terminated. FIFA has issued regulations governing the conduct of football agents globally, including requirements for registration and limits on commission, which apply to agents and clubs operating in Kenyan football.
Sponsorship Agreements in Kenyan Sport
Sponsorship agreements in Kenyan sport are commercial contracts in which a sponsor provides financial support, goods, or services to a club, athlete, event, or federation in exchange for specified marketing rights. Key provisions in a Kenyan sports sponsorship agreement include the sponsorship package, naming rights, kit branding, perimeter advertising, hospitality, and digital media rights; exclusivity provisions preventing competing sponsors; the sponsor’s approval rights over use of their branding; termination rights triggered by the sponsored party’s breach, poor performance, or reputational event; and activation obligations requiring the sponsor to promote the association actively.
The Sports Disputes Tribunal
The Sports Disputes Tribunal (SDT), established under the Sports Act 2013, is Kenya’s specialised tribunal for resolving sports-related disputes. The SDT has jurisdiction over disputes between athletes and clubs, between clubs and federations, and between athletes and national sports organisations. Its decisions are binding and enforceable. Athletes and clubs are required to exhaust the SDT process before approaching the ordinary courts for sports-related disputes, reflecting the principle of exhausting internal sports dispute resolution mechanisms before external judicial intervention.
Information on the Sports Disputes Tribunal jurisdiction over sports contract disputes is available from the Sports Disputes Tribunal.
For legal advice on sports contract drafting, player agreements, sponsorship arrangements, image rights, and sports disputes in Kenya, consult our sports law practice. Our litigation and dispute resolution practice represents parties before the Sports Disputes Tribunal and in sports-related court proceedings from our offices at Nextgen Mall, Nairobi.






