🇯🇵 JPY to 🇰🇪 KES — Japanese Yen (yen) to Kenyan Shilling Rate Today
Live indicative interbank rate, June 2026. Updated daily at 01:00 UTC.
Convert Japanese Yen to Kenyan Shilling at the live indicative interbank rate with the converter below. A reference for importers, businesses and Japanese Yen–Kenyan Shilling trade.
JPY to KES rate change
Rate tracking started 15 June 2026. Change data fills in daily — 1-day change available tomorrow.
Change in the JPY→KES rate. + means the Kenyan Shilling weakened against the Japanese Yen; − means it strengthened.
Currency converter
JPY → KES conversion table
| JPY | KES |
|---|---|
| 500 | 404.50 |
| 1,000 | 809.00 |
| 2,000 | 1,618.00 |
| 5,000 | 4,045.00 |
| 10,000 | 8,090.00 |
| 25,000 | 20,225.00 |
| 50,000 | 40,450.00 |
| 100,000 | 80,900.00 |
| 250,000 | 202,250.00 |
| 500,000 | 404,500.00 |
| 1,000,000 | 809,000.00 |
Table computed at the indicative rate of 1 JPY = 0.809 KES. Real operator-side values include a 1%-4% spread.
Why the JPY/KES rate matters for trade
Japan is the dominant source of used vehicles for Kenya, the largest right-hand-drive market in East Africa, with cars shipped through Mombasa to buyers across the region. Beyond cars, Japan supplies machinery and equipment. The JPY/KES rate is the first number a Kenyan importer needs when a Japanese auction price is quoted in yen.
Importing a car from Japan?
The yen price at a Japanese auction is only part of the landed cost. Import duty, VAT and an age-based levy are charged separately by the tax authority (KRA in Kenya, URA in Uganda) — the price converted here is just the starting point.
How East-Africa car-import duty works (regional example) →Japanese Yen to Kenyan Shilling exchange rate history
What moves the Kenyan Shilling rate
The Kenyan shilling is shaped by the CBK's inflation-targeting policy. Diaspora remittances (the country's top FX earner), tourism and tea receipts and Eurobond flows move it. It is a relatively managed currency, less volatile than the rand.
About the Japanese Yen
The Japanese Yen (JPY, ¥) is issued by the Bank of Japan and, unlike most currencies, has no minor unit in everyday use — amounts are quoted in whole yen, so a price is written as ¥10,000 with no decimal places. The yen is one of the world's most-traded currencies and a traditional safe-haven, which makes it relatively liquid against African currencies even though direct JPY/Africa interbank markets are thin and most rates are derived through the US dollar. For African importers the yen matters most in two arenas: capital goods and machinery (Japan is a major supplier of vehicles, plant and electronics across the continent), and the used-vehicle trade, where Japan is the dominant export source for right-hand-drive markets in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and beyond. Because the per-unit yen value is small against currencies like the naira or shilling, buyers usually convert in tens of thousands of yen.
About the Kenyan Shilling
The Kenyan Shilling (KES, KSh) is the official currency of Kenya, issued by the Central Bank of Kenya. Subdivided into 100 cents, the Shilling is one of East Africa's most-traded currencies and the de facto settlement unit for many cross-border flows in the EAC region. Kenya's outsized digital-payments ecosystem — anchored by Safaricom's M-Pesa, which clears a transaction volume equivalent to a substantial share of Kenyan GDP each year — means the KES is among the most active African currencies for mobile-money rails. The Central Bank of Kenya runs a managed-float regime with periodic interventions to smooth volatility, and the Shilling has generally tracked broader sub-Saharan currency trends against the USD. For inbound USD remittances to M-Pesa, formal-channel rates typically sit within 1%-2% of the interbank reference.
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FAQ
What is the JPY/KES exchange rate today?
How much is 100 JPY in KES?
Is this the rate for importing or paying a JPY/KES supplier?
Is the Kenyan Shilling a stable currency?
Where do I get the best JPY/KES rate?
Rates shown on this page are indicative interbank reference rates updated daily. For an actual trade payment, banks, forex bureaus and trade-finance providers add a 1%-3% margin above this reference, plus any fixed fees (SWIFT wire, letter of credit). Use this rate as a benchmark, not a quote. MomoCalc does not process payments.