Estate agents have supported the move by the government to register them a fresh saying it would bring sanity to the industry.
They
say the move will weed out conmen from the sector and raise the
standards in an industry that has remained largely unregulated.
Currently, anyone can apply at the Estates Agents Board regardless of their professional qualification.
Acting
Cabinet Secretary for Lands and Housing Fred Matyangi said on Friday
last week the ministry was drawing up guidelines to register estate
agents afresh to bring sanity to the industry.
Regent
group Senior Property Manager Njeri Njoroge says the government should
define specific qualifications to be met including the right educational
qualification.
“Right now all you need is a
certificate of good conduct to show that you do not have a criminal
history and if you convince the board you are an agent,” she said.
She
said if the sector was regularized then clients will know they are
dealing with genuine people adding that the market had been flooded by
non-professionals.
Ms Njoroge also said the agents would be open to plans by the Kenya Revenue Authority to use them to collect rental income tax.
TAX
KRA
has had trouble infiltrating the property market for taxes due to lack
of sufficient data although the sector continues to boom attracting
billions of investments.
The taxman says data from the
Kenya National Spatial Data Infrastructure project under the Ministry of
Lands has accumulated data that will help it crack into the revenues
collected by landlords.
This year’s Financial Bill 2015
targets real estate properties as a major financier of the Sh2.1
trillion national budget through real estate agents to collect and remit
a withholding tax of 12 per cent charged on rental income.
The
Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) plans to collect Sh3 billion by bringing
on board 20,000 landlords in the 2015/16 financial year.
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