According to allafrica.com, Kenya and Tanzania have jointly committed to eliminating all non-tariff barriers (NTBs) along their shared trade corridor by 31 May 2026. The deadline was announced during high-level bilateral talks held at State House Dar es Salaam on 5 May 2026, where Kenyan President William Ruto and Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu reaffirmed their political will to accelerate regional integration within the East African Community (EAC).
Targeted Non-Tariff Barriers
The agreement specifically targets three categories of NTBs identified as persistent impediments to cross-border commerce: customs delays, regulatory inconsistencies, and administrative bottlenecks. These barriers have contributed to elevated logistics costs and extended transit times — for example, truck dwell time at the Namanga border crossing has averaged 48–72 hours in recent quarterly EAC monitoring reports, compared to the regional target of under 6 hours.
Strategic Corridor Significance
The Kenya–Tanzania trade corridor is among the most active in East Africa, handling an estimated $2.1 billion in annual bilateral goods trade, per the East African Community Secretariat’s 2025 Trade Statistical Bulletin. It also serves as a critical transit route for third-country goods moving to Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Over 65% of land-based imports entering landlocked EAC partner states pass through this corridor, according to World Bank transport flow analysis published in March 2025.
Implementation Framework & Stakeholder Accountability
To enforce the May 2026 deadline, both governments have mandated joint technical teams from Kenya’s Ministry of Trade and Industrialisation and Tanzania’s Ministry of Industry and Trade to submit bi-monthly progress reports to the EAC Council of Ministers. A dedicated NTB Monitoring Dashboard — publicly accessible via the EAC NTB Portal — will track resolution rates starting June 2025. As Caroline Karugu, Director of Trade Facilitation at the EAC Secretariat, stated:
“The commitment by both Heads of State to resolve all non-tariff barriers within this timeline demonstrates strong political will to unlock the full potential of regional trade.” — Caroline Karugu, Director of Trade Facilitation, East African Community Secretariat
Broader Regional Context
This bilateral initiative aligns with the EAC’s broader AfCFTA implementation roadmap, which requires member states to reduce NTBs by 90% before 2030. It follows similar commitments made by Rwanda and Uganda in January 2025 to harmonize phytosanitary certification timelines to 72 hours, and by Kenya and Uganda in November 2024 to eliminate redundant road haulage permits by 30 September 2025. According to the African Union’s 2024 NTB Scorecard, Kenya and Tanzania ranked 12th and 18th, respectively, out of 54 African countries in NTB resolution efficiency — underscoring both urgency and measurable baseline performance.
Source: allafrica.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










