Field Engineering · Updated April 2026

Gold Prospecting in Kenya — The Complete Field Guide

By Garrett Africa Field Engineering · 9 min read · Verified against KCB Mining records and on-the-ground reports from our customers

Kenya has been quietly producing gold for over a century. The British colonial Geological Survey mapped most of the country's productive zones in the 1930s–50s, and almost every documented Kenyan goldfield is still producing today. This guide tells you where to prospect, what permits you need, which Garrett detector to bring, and when to go.

What's in this guide
  1. Kenya gold overview
  2. Vihiga County — fine alluvial
  3. Narok — alluvial + lode
  4. Kisumu Basin
  5. Kakamega Forest belt
  6. Kajiado — granite lode
  7. Permits and the Mining Act 2016
  8. Recommended gear
  9. When to prospect
  10. Where to sell
  11. FAQ

Kenya gold overview

Kenya's gold-producing belt runs in a rough north-south line through Western Province, the Rift Valley, and into the Tanzanian border. The dominant deposit type is alluvial — gold weathered out of greenstone bedrock and re-deposited in river systems. Particle sizes are small (mostly sub-gram flake to 5g nuggets), making 48 kHz VLF detectors like the Garrett Gold Master 24K the standard tool.

Vihiga County 🏞️ — fine alluvial

Western Kenya · 0.075° N, 34.713° E · HIGH POTENTIAL

Vihiga County

Why it's hot: Vihiga sits on the Maragoli greenstone belt — same geology that produced Tanzania's Lake Victoria fields. Local artisanal miners have worked the streams for generations. Gold is overwhelmingly fine flake to 1g pieces in iron-rich clay.

Best detector: Garrett Goldmaster 24K. The 48 kHz frequency is essential here — 13 kHz general detectors miss most of what's available.

Access: Mbale, Luanda, Hamisi sub-counties. Approach via Kakamega-Kisumu road. Always speak to the local Chief and the landowner before swinging.

Narok 🏔️ — alluvial + lode

Rift Valley · -1.084° S, 35.866° E · HIGH POTENTIAL

Narok Region

Why it's hot: Narok produces both alluvial gold (rivers and dry creek beds) and lode gold in volcanic basalt. Larger nugget sizes than Vihiga — pieces up to 30g have been recorded. Less worked than Vihiga = more left to find.

Best detector: Garrett Goldmaster 24K for shallow alluvial; Garrett Axiom for deeper lode targets in basalt.

Access: Narok town → Mau forest edge. Coordinate with Maasai community elders.

Kisumu Basin 🌊 — sandy placer

Lake Victoria · -0.092° S, 34.768° E · HIGH-MEDIUM POTENTIAL

Kisumu Basin

Sandy riverbed placer deposits along Kisumu's tributaries. Gold is fine and shallow (0.2–0.8m). Best worked combined with traditional pan/sluice. The Goldmaster 24K helps locate hot spots before you commit to digging.

Kakamega Forest belt 🌲

Western Kenya · ~0.28° N, 34.75° E · HIGH POTENTIAL

Kakamega Forest belt

Adjacent to Vihiga geologically. Forest cover makes detecting harder but reduces competition. Forest edge clearings and dry stream beds are productive.

Kajiado — granite lode 🪨

Southern Rift · -1.853° S, 36.787° E · MEDIUM POTENTIAL

Kajiado District

Lode gold in hard granite at 1–3 m depths. PI territory — bring the Garrett Axiom for serious work. The Goldmaster will pick up shallow surface traces but won't punch deep enough for the main targets.

Permits and the Mining Act 2016

Kenya's Mining Act 2016 governs all prospecting and mining activity. Three relevant tiers:

For amateur weekend prospecting on cooperative land, the AMP is the lowest-friction route. Garrett Africa can connect you with KCB Mining (Kenya Chamber of Mines) for application help.

Recommended gear for Kenyan goldfields

When to prospect

Best months: December–February (long dry) and June–September (short dry). River systems are accessible and exposed gold layers reachable. The wet seasons (March–May "long rains" and October–November "short rains") make river prospecting impossible but expose new layers when waters recede.

Where to sell gold in Kenya

Nairobi street rate for clean gold is around KES 6,000–6,800/g (mid-2026). Buyers congregate around Tom Mboya Street and the Diamond Plaza area. Always weigh on a calibrated scale and confirm purity. Garrett Africa can recommend trusted licensed buyers — ask via WhatsApp.

Ready to start prospecting?

The right detector pays for itself in 5–10 productive weekends. WhatsApp our team for a starter package quote.

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FAQ

Is gold prospecting legal in Kenya?

Yes, with the appropriate permit (AMP for artisanal, PL for commercial). Permission from landowners is also required.

What's the cheapest serious gold detector for Kenya?

The Garrett Goldmaster 24K at KES 135,000 is the cheapest serious detector for Kenyan ground. Anything cheaper is a toy that won't find sub-gram flake reliably.

Can I share a detector with friends?

Yes — many cooperatives buy one Axiom and share among 3–5 prospectors. Each prospector covers ~30 acres in a weekend. Splits depend on whose land you're on and who recovered the find.