Construction of Tanzania-Kenya Highway Delayed to 2020

Malindi-Bagamoyo Kenya-Tanzania highway

China’s official state-run press agency Xinhua recently reported that the construction of the coastal highway linking the towns of Malindi in Kenya to Bagamoyo in Tanzania will begin in early 2020, according to an official of the African Development Bank (AfDB).

Gabriel Negatu, Director General of the East Africa Regional Development and Business Delivery Office of AfDB, said in Nairobi that funding for the 460km road should be approved in September 2019.

In a previous announcement in December 2018, Negatu indicated that construction work would start in early 2019.

However, in this latest announcement Negatu explained that both the Kenyan and the Tanzanian governments have finalized all their requirements to pave way for the construction works.

The 460 km road consists of 250 km on Kenya’s side and the rest on the Tanzanian portion and is expected to improve cross-border trade, tourism, socio-economic development and promote regional integration.

The highway is also expected to ease the movement of traffic from both Mombasa and Tanga ports, destined to neighboring land-locked countries Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, South Sudan, and DR Congo.

The upgrade of the current road to class II bitumen and widening to double carriageway will be jointly funded by the East African Community (EAC) and AfDB.

The construction cost is budgeted at USD 751.3 million, with 70% borrowed from the AfDB, and each country funding 30% of the work in its territory.

The project experience some delays to kickoff for the past two years, mostly attributed to changes in road design from single carriageway to double carriageway, along a section of the highway.

AfDB estimates that it will take 36 months to complete the upgrade.

Want to know more about Transport in Tanzania? Our free Tanzania Business and Investment Guide 2026 covers Transport, plus regulations, key sectors, and investment opportunities—all in one place.

Download Free Guide
Related Posts
Tanzania Dodoma Msalato International Airport Inspection Khamis Omar
Read More

Dodoma Msalato International Airport Set to Begin Operations in September 2026

Msalato International Airport in Dodoma is scheduled to begin operations in September 2026 as construction advances toward completion. The airport will have the capacity to handle 1.5 million passengers annually and is expected to strengthen domestic and international air connectivity while supporting investment and economic activity in Tanzania's capital.
Tanzania Transport Budget Bunge Parliament Makame Mbarawa
Read More

Tanzania Transport Budget 2026/2027 of TZS 2.87 Trillion Positions Tanzania as a Regional Logistics Hub, with TZS 1.51 Trillion for SGR

Tanzania's TZS 2.87 trillion Transport Budget 2026/27 directs 95.62% to development across rail, aviation, ports, and maritime infrastructure to position the country as the regional logistics hub of Eastern, Central, and Southern Africa. The Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) alone receives TZS 1.51 trillion in domestic financing plus TZS 61.84 billion from the OPEC Fund, equivalent to 55% of the entire development envelope.
Tanzania ASSESSMENT OF ECONOMIC IMPACTS ON TANZANIA ARISING FROM THE GULF CRISIS
Read More

Tanzania Gulf Crisis Report Rates Energy, Food, Transport, Tourism and Budget at High Risk

A May 2026 rapid assessment by Tanzania's National Planning Commission and UNDP rates energy, food, transport, tourism and the Government budget at high risk from the Gulf crisis, which raised Dar es Salaam fuel prices by up to 69% between January and May 2026. The report flags a possible TZS 153.7 billion monthly customs revenue shortfall and fuel subsidy needs rising to TZS 1,384.2 billion by July, alongside buffers including a 124% food self-sufficiency ratio, USD 6.3 billion in reserves and 57 trillion cubic feet of gas.
Tanzania Kenya Rwanda
Read More

Tanzania Hosts Rwanda and Kenya Presidents, Signs MoUs on Tanga-Taveta SGR, Dar-Mombasa Gas Pipeline, and Scraps Non-Tariff Barriers

Tanzania hosted Rwandan President Paul Kagame on 3 May 2026 and Kenyan President William Ruto on 4-5 May 2026, signing eight MoUs with Kenya covering railways and a Dar es Salaam-Mombasa gas pipeline study, and agreeing to eliminate all non-tariff barriers by May 2026. Bilateral trade with Rwanda reached TZS 644 billion in 2025, while Tanzania-Kenya trade stood at over USD 720 million in 2024.