ated, and Sh53.6 million was paid for students who had deferred their studies or were on long academic leave. The Kenya Times
When the Higher Education Principal Secretary Dr Beatrice Inyangala was summoned before the PAC to explain, she struggled to justify the expenditure, initially blaming the Auditor-General for relying on unverified data, then conceding that some private universities had deliberately declined to hand over student data to the auditors. The Kenya Times
Committee member Geoffrey Ruku (Mbeere North) put it bluntly: “These funds were disbursed to the private universities so that they could make profit with no remittances to the exchequer.” The Kenya Times
Ruto Drops the Bombshell: Ksh120 Billion Owed
The ghost student scandal is inseparable from a wider funding crisis that has been building for years. The chickens finally came home to roost in early 2026 when President William Ruto openly admitted why his administration had halted KUCCPS placements to private universities entirely.
Speaking at a Methodist Church leadership meeting at State House in February 2026, Ruto revealed that the government inherited a debt of almost Ksh120 billion in unpaid university capitation. “When I assumed office, I found a debt of almost Ksh120 billion. Now, when you find yourself in a hole, you must stop digging. I instructed officials to stop sending students to private universities,” he said. Daily Nation
The decision was sweeping. KUCCPS confirmed that 43 public universities now qualify for both government scholarships and HELB loans, while 30 private universities are eligible for HELB loans only — meaning no government scholarship will follow a student who chooses a private institution. Tuko
The Private University Lobby Flexes Its Muscles — And Wins
Perhaps the most politically charged chapter of the KUCCPS saga is what happened in Parliament in 2023, when the government tried to reform the system — and was promptly outmanoeuvred.
A government-sponsored Omnibus Bill proposed giving KUCCPS the power to coordinate placements across both public and private universities — not necessarily directing public money, but simply standardising admissions and quality control. Private university owners saw through the proposal immediately and recognised it as a threat to their revenue streams.
The fear of losing billions in capitation fees saw the government yield to pressure from private universities, effectively abandoning the proposed amendments. National Assembly Speaker Moses Wetang’ula acceded to a request by Majority Leader Kimani Ichung’wah to withdraw the changes from the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Amendments) Bill 2023. KUCCPS
Allowing KUCCPS to coordinate placements across all universities would have denied private university proprietors the capitation they had been receiving from government-sponsored students — and they were not about to let that happen quietly. KUCCPS
The C+ Grade: Kenya’s Sacred Cow Is Now Being Questioned
Just when students thought the KUCCPS system couldn’t get more unpredictable, the placement body’s own CEO opened another can of worms in January 2026.
KUCCPS CEO Agnes Wahome declared that the long-standing C+ minimum university entry grade may soon be scrapped as Kenya transitions to the Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC). “Now, this is a conversation that should start fading away as we move fully into CBC, because we have over-emphasised grades and used them as the main measure of success,” she said. Daily Nation
The announcement immediately triggered a wave of social media misinformation, with users falsely claiming that C+ had already been dropped. A fact-check confirmed that no such change had taken effect — KUCCPS had merely updated its portal to display course cluster points used in the 2024 placement cycle. Any new criteria would only take effect after stakeholder validation and formal board approval, with implementation planned for the 2026/2027 cycle at the earliest. Daily Nation
What It All Means
KUCCPS was designed as a neutral, merit-based gateway into higher education. Instead, it has become a contested financial pipeline — one where billions of shillings have flowed to ghost students, where private universities have successfully lobbied to protect their share of public funds, and where a Ksh120 billion debt forced a sitting president to restructure the entire placement architecture on the fly.
For Kenya’s Form Four leavers — who simply want to know where they will study — the system has never felt more uncertain. And for taxpayers footing the bill, the question is simple: where did the money go?
The images above work well for the article. If you’d like this formatted as a Word document or PDF ready for your website’s CMS, just say the word!