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Complete maize farming guide Kenya 2026:From soil to 30 bags per acre

The average Kenyan smallholder maize farmer harvests 8 to 12 bags per acre. The precision farmer on the same soil in the same county harvests 25 to 35. The difference is not luck, land size, or expensive equipment. It is four decisions made correctly: soil pH before anything, the right variety for the right altitude, fertilizer applied at the right time, and fall armyworm caught early. This guide covers every step from soil to storage with specific recommendations for Kenya's seven major maize-growing agroecological zones.

PA
Polycarp Andabwa·MSc agricultural environmental engineering·founder, ShambaIQ
·11 min read
Kenyan farmer examining maize crop in fertile green field
High-yield maize crop in the Rift Valley highlands, Kenya. Source: ShambaIQ field data.

Why most Kenyan maize yields are low

Kenya's national average maize yield of 1.7 tonnes per hectare (roughly 10 bags per acre) is among the lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa for a country with highland potential. Four fixable problems account for most of the gap between current yields and achievable yields.

Wrong soil pH

40–60% yield loss

Most maize in Central and Western Kenya is grown on soils at pH 4.8 to 5.5. Aluminium toxicity at this pH destroys root tips before they can absorb fertilizer. The fertilizer is applied — it goes nowhere.

Wrong variety for the altitude

20–40% yield loss

A highland variety planted in the lowlands fails to silk and set grain properly. A lowland variety in the highlands takes too long to mature. Variety-altitude mismatch is extremely common and almost never discussed by agrovets.

CAN applied at planting instead of knee-height

15–30% efficiency loss

CAN applied at planting volatilises from the soil surface before root uptake. Knee-height CAN is absorbed by an established root system during rapid growth — the same nitrogen does 3× the work.

Fall armyworm left uncontrolled

20–80% yield loss in outbreak years

Fall armyworm is now endemic and reaches economic threshold levels on 60 to 70 percent of Kenyan farms in outbreak seasons. A single spray missed at the early whorl stage can destroy 50 percent of a stand within one week.

Choosing the right maize variety by zone

Best maize varieties by altitude and agroecological zone Kenya
ZoneAltitudeKey countiesTop varietiesDays to maturityYield potential
Highland1,800–2,400mNyandarua, Nyeri upper, Meru upperH614D, WH507140–160 days28–38 bags/acre
Upper Midland1,500–1,800mNakuru, Uasin Gishu, Trans NzoiaDK8031, H614D, SC403120–140 days25–35 bags/acre
Midland1,200–1,500mKakamega, Nandi, Kisii, EmbuDK777, Pioneer 3253, SC403100–120 days20–28 bags/acre
Lower Midland900–1,200mMachakos, Makueni, Kitui lowlandsWH505, DK8031, DUMA 4390–110 days14–22 bags/acre
Semi-arid600–900mKajiado, Baringo lowlands, KwaleDUMA 43, WH50585–100 days10–18 bags/acre

DAP and CAN fertilizer programme

Maize fertilizer programme Kenya DAP CAN application timing and rates
StageFertilizerRate/acrePlacementCritical timing
At plantingDAP50 kg (1 bag)5cm below & beside seed in furrowSame day as planting — never contact seed directly
Knee height (4–6 wks)CAN50 kg (1 bag)Ring 5–10 cm from stem baseApply before rain — within 24 hrs of forecast
Optional: low P soilsTSP or Rock Phosphate25–50 kgBroadcast and incorporate before plantingSoils where P below 10 mg/kg — check ShambaIQ first
Optional: acidic soilsDolomitic lime1–2.5 t/acreBroadcast and incorporateAt least 3 weeks before DAP application

Fall armyworm and disease control

Fall Armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda)

Threshold: 10% plant infestation
Timing: Week 2 onwards
Product: Emamectin benzoate or Chlorantraniliprole into whorl

Spray into the whorl, not on leaf surfaces. Scout twice weekly. One spray at threshold is far more effective than three sprays on established populations.

Stalk borers (Busseola fusca)

Threshold: 15% dead hearts
Timing: Week 3–8
Product: Cypermethin or Lambdacyhalothrin into whorl at knee height

Endemic across all Kenyan maize zones. Stalk borer and fall armyworm often co-occur — select products with efficacy against both.

Grey Leaf Spot (Cercospora zeae-maydis)

Threshold: Visible lesions on lower 3 leaves
Timing: After tasselling
Product: Propiconazole or Azoxystrobin foliar

Most damaging in humid highland conditions. H614D has moderate tolerance. Single application at early symptom is sufficient in most seasons.

Northern Corn Leaf Blight (Exserohilum turcicum)

Threshold: Lesions on upper canopy leaves
Timing: After tasselling
Product: Mancozeb or Propiconazole foliar

Favoured by cool humid conditions in highland maize zones. Variety resistance varies — check KEPHIS variety data for your seed source.

Step-by-step: growing maize in Kenya

  1. 1

    Get your farm's soil pH and choose the right variety

    Use ShambaIQ at shambaiq.com to get your farm's soil pH and recommended maize variety for your altitude and county. Variety selection is the single most impactful decision — a highland variety planted in lowland conditions or vice versa loses 30 to 50 percent of its yield potential before any other management decisions are made.

  2. 2

    Lime if soil pH is below 5.8

    If ShambaIQ or a soil test shows pH below 5.8, apply agricultural lime at least 3 to 4 weeks before planting. At pH 4.8 to 5.2 apply 2 tonnes of dolomitic lime per acre. At pH 5.2 to 5.5 apply 1 to 1.5 tonnes. At pH 5.5 to 5.8 apply 500 kg to 1 tonne. Incorporate lime to 15 cm depth. Do not apply DAP in the same week as lime — wait at least 3 weeks.

  3. 3

    Plant certified seed at onset of rains

    Plant certified F1 hybrid seed at the first reliable rains when soil moisture is available at 5 cm depth. Spacing: 75 cm between rows and 25 cm within rows, one seed per hole 3 to 5 cm deep. This gives approximately 53,000 plants per acre. Apply DAP at 50 kg per acre in the furrow 5 cm below and beside the seed — never in direct contact.

  4. 4

    Top-dress with CAN at knee height

    Apply CAN at 50 kg per acre when maize reaches 45 to 60 cm height — approximately 4 to 6 weeks after planting. Apply in a ring 5 to 10 cm from the stem base. If rainfall is delayed after CAN application, the nitrogen volatilises before uptake — timing CAN application before predicted rain improves efficiency significantly.

  5. 5

    Scout for fall armyworm from week 2

    Inspect 10 to 20 plants per field twice per week from week 2. Look for ragged whorl damage and frass. Spray emamectin benzoate into the whorl at 10 percent plant infestation. Early intervention at under 20 percent infestation costs less and is more effective than reactive spraying on widespread populations.

  6. 6

    Harvest at correct moisture and store properly

    Harvest when husks are brown and seeds dent at the crown — approximately 120 days after planting for most highland hybrids. Field-dry on the stalk for 2 to 3 weeks after maturity, then harvest and strip husks. Dry shelled grain to below 13 percent moisture before bagging. Treat with Actellic Super or hermetic bags against weevils before storage.

Cost and revenue budget per acre — Kenyan maize 2026

ItemTotal (KES)
Certified hybrid seed (2 kg)1,600
DAP (1 bag)4,200
CAN (1 bag)3,500
Lime (if needed — amortised)3,000
Fall armyworm sprays x22,500
Labour planting + weeding + harvest5,000
TOTAL COSTKES 19,800
Revenue (28 bags × KES 3,500)KES 98,000
Net marginKES 78,200

Free Precision Tool

Get your county's maize fertilizer plan — bags per acre, cost, and application schedule.

ShambaIQ gives you your county's soil pH, phosphorus and nitrogen levels, and the best maize variety for your specific location. Free, no sign-up required.

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Frequently asked questions

How many bags of maize can I get per acre in Kenya?+
With optimal soil pH (6.0–6.8), correct fertilizer application (1 bag DAP at planting + 1 bag CAN top-dress), a certified hybrid variety suited to your altitude, and adequate rainfall or irrigation, Kenyan farmers in highland counties achieve 25 to 35 bags of 90 kg per acre. In highland zones with good management and two seasons, 30 bags per acre is a realistic target. In ASAL zones with drought-tolerant varieties and good management, 12 to 20 bags per acre is achievable. Average Kenyan smallholder maize yield is currently 8 to 12 bags per acre — most of the gap is explained by soil pH, wrong variety, and fertilizer timing errors that ShambaIQ can identify for your specific farm.
What is the best maize variety in Kenya 2026?+
The best maize variety depends on your altitude and county. For the highlands (1,500–2,200m): H614D, DK8031, and WH507 consistently top performance trials. For mid-altitude (1,200–1,500m): DK777, SC403, and Pioneer 3253 perform best. For lowlands and ASAL zones: DUMA 43, WH505, and DK8031 are the most drought-tolerant certified varieties. Never use recycled seed from the previous season's hybrid harvest — hybrid seed loses its yield advantage in the second generation and produces 30 to 40 percent lower yields than fresh certified F1 seed.
When should I apply DAP and CAN fertilizer for maize in Kenya?+
Apply DAP at planting — place it in the furrow 5 cm below and 5 cm beside the seed, never in direct seed contact. Standard rate is 50 kg per acre (1 bag). Apply CAN as a top-dress when maize is knee-high — approximately 4 to 6 weeks after germination when the plants are 45 to 60 cm tall. At this growth stage nitrogen drives the rapid leaf area expansion and tassel development that determines yield potential. Standard CAN rate is 50 kg per acre. Do not apply CAN at planting — it volatilises rapidly from the surface and provides little benefit compared to well-timed knee-high application.
How do I control fall armyworm in maize in Kenya?+
Fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) is now endemic across Kenya's maize belt. Scout weekly from seedling emergence — look for ragged leaf damage and frass (dark green or brown pellets) in the whorl. At 10 percent infestation, spray with emamectin benzoate (Escort, Proclaim) or chlorantraniliprole (Coragen) into the whorl rather than on leaf surfaces — armyworm feeds in the whorl where it is protected from surface sprays. Early morning spraying (6–9am) reaches larvae when they are feeding rather than sheltering. Spray windows of 7 days are required — a single spray rarely provides complete control.
What causes yellow leaves in maize?+
Yellow maize leaves have multiple causes that require different treatments. Uniform yellowing of lower leaves spreading upward: nitrogen deficiency — apply CAN immediately. V-shaped yellow from leaf tip on lower leaves: potassium deficiency. Interveinal yellowing on young upper leaves: zinc deficiency — common on alkaline soils. Pale yellowing across all leaves with stunted plants: soil pH below 5.5 causing aluminium toxicity or phosphorus lockout — lime required. Yellowing with purple streaks: phosphorus deficiency in cold soils. Irregular yellow patches with wilting: grey leaf spot or northern corn leaf blight — fungicide required. Get a precise diagnosis at shambaiq.com.
Is it worth lime maize fields in Kenya?+
On soils below pH 5.5 — which covers much of Central Kenya, Western Kenya, and the Mount Kenya counties — liming maize fields returns between KES 3 and KES 8 for every KES 1 spent on lime, through improved fertilizer efficiency, elimination of aluminium toxicity, and direct yield increase. At pH 4.8, maize yields 40 to 60 percent below its potential regardless of how much fertilizer is applied. Liming 1 acre to pH 6.0 costs KES 10,000 to 21,000 depending on starting pH, adds 10 to 20 bags of maize at KES 3,500 per bag, and the effect lasts 3 to 4 seasons. The ROI is among the highest of any farm investment available to Kenyan smallholders.

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