
AMSONS Group Wins Sh90bn Contract to Build 10 Maternal Hospitals in Kenya
Tanzanian conglomerate AMSONS will deliver 10 mother-and-child facilities across nine Kenyan counties under a 90.75-billion-shilling agreement signed at State House Nairobi.
TBJ Newsroom
3 min read · May 3, 2026
Tanzanian conglomerate AMSONS Group has signed a TSh90.75 billion (KES 4.5 billion) agreement with the Kenyan government to design, build and equip 10 mother-and-child hospitals across nine Kenyan counties, in one of the largest cross-border infrastructure contracts to date involving a Tanzanian private firm.
The deal was signed on April 29 at State House Nairobi by AMSONS Managing Director and CEO Edha Nahdi alongside Kenyan President Dr William Ruto and Cabinet Secretary for Health Aden Duale. Two of the facilities will be located in Nairobi, with the remaining eight spread across Kwale, Kisumu, Uasin Gishu, West Pokot, Mombasa, Garissa, Embu and Nakuru counties. Each hospital will house antenatal units, maternal intensive-care units, labour, delivery and recovery wards, and at least two operating theatres. AMSONS will provide 250 beds across the network, with the Kenyan government supplying additional equipment and support services.
Construction is set to begin within 90 days of administrative procedures being concluded, with the facilities targeted for operational status by 2028. The contract gives AMSONS its largest publicly disclosed healthcare-infrastructure mandate to date and an entry point into Kenya's social-infrastructure pipeline.
For Tanzania's private sector, the deal is a notable outbound signal. A maternal-healthcare contract of this scale combines construction, equipment supply and capability transfer over a multi-year cycle, and brings a category of long-cycle government-financed work to the table that has historically been the province of large foreign engineering firms. The choice of a Tanzanian counterparty also reflects deepening commercial integration between two East African Community neighbours at a time when Nairobi is pursuing private-sector partnerships to close maternal-healthcare gaps.
President Ruto framed the contract as part of a broader maternal-health push, telling those gathered at State House that the government was "taking decisive action to change this reality." Mr Nahdi, for his part, said the project was driven by a conviction that "no mother should lose her life while bringing forth a new life."
The 2028 operational target gives AMSONS a roughly two-year build window once procedures are finalised. Delivery on schedule would set a benchmark for future cross-border social-infrastructure contracts originating from Tanzanian conglomerates.
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