Why More Kenyan Women Are Choosing Technical and Vocational Careers

According to TVET Authority data, women make up less than 15% of enrolment in engineering and technical courses in Kenya. 

Though women who do enter these fields consistently perform at the same level or better than their male peers in assessments, workplace performance, and client satisfaction, the gap is not about ability; it’s access, awareness, and social barriers.

Today, with Kenya’s construction and manufacturing sectors booming, the demand for skilled technicians is outpacing supply. Employers, especially international contractors, are actively looking for qualified women to meet diversity requirements and fill genuine skill gaps.

Reasons  Women Excel in Technical Fields

  • Attention to Detail

Mechanics, plant operation, and precision engineering require careful, methodical work. Studies in East Africa consistently show that women score higher on detailed procedural tasks in technical assessments.

  • Communication and Client Skills

Female mechanics frequently report higher client satisfaction ratings, especially from female car owners who feel more comfortable discussing vehicle problems with them.

  • Safety Consciousness

Women operators tend to have better safety records on construction sites. This is a significant advantage since the Directorate of Occupational Safety and Health Services (DOSHS) safety incidents are costly and can shut down entire projects.

  • Adaptability

Women entering male-dominated fields develop resilience and problem-solving abilities that make them exceptional employees and entrepreneurs.

Barriers Women Face and How to Overcome Them

  • Social and Family Pressure

Many Kenyan families still direct daughters toward ‘softer’ careers.

 The solution is exposure, sharing stories of successful female technicians with your family or bringing them to an open day at a technical college to see women working confidently.

  • Lack of Female Role Models in Training Institutions

When a young woman looks at a mechanics classroom and sees only male instructors and male students, she may feel she doesn’t belong. Institutions need to actively recruit female students and instructors.

  • Harassment and Discrimination on Worksites

This is a real challenge. The best protection is credentials; a certified, skilled woman is much harder to dismiss than an informal worker. Additionally, know your rights under the Employment Act and the Sexual Harassment policy that all employers are legally required to have.

  • Access to Finance for Training

Course fees can be a barrier. But there are specifically targeted solutions:

i).   Women Enterprise Fund – low-interest loans for women starting businesses

ii).  Inua Mama SME Fund – KES 10 billion government fund (2026) for women entrepreneurs

iii). County government bursaries – many counties have technical training bursaries for women

iv).  HELB loans – available to TVET students

v).  NGO scholarships – UN Women, Mastercard Foundation, Africa Development Bank all fund women in STEM and technical fields

 

Top Technical Careers for Women in Kenya in 2026

1. Plant Operation

Operating excavators, graders, forklifts, and cranes. Salary range: KES 40,000–120,000/month. Strong demand in road construction, mining, and port operations.

2. Automotive Mechanics

Vehicle servicing, diagnostics, and repair. Can be employed or self-employed. Starting a mobile mechanic business requires minimal capital.

3. Electrical and Electronics Technology

Industrial wiring, solar installation, and electrical fault-finding. Very high demand in 2026 due to Kenya’s energy expansion. Salary: KES 35,000–90,000/month.

4. Welding and Fabrication

Structural welding, pipe welding, and artistic metalwork. Women welders are rare and therefore very sought after. Salary: KES 30,000–80,000/month plus self-employment potential.

5. Refrigeration and Air Conditioning – HVAC

Installation and maintenance of cooling systems. Growing market due to increased commercial construction. Salary: KES 35,000–70,000/month.

How a Woman Can Enter Plant Operation or Mechanics

  1. Research the field – visit a training institution and shadow a practitioner for a day
  2. Enrol in an accredited TVET course –  look for institutions with women-friendly facilities and policies
  3. Apply for financial support early – bursaries and loans have deadlines
  4. Connect with networks like WISE Kenya (Women in Science and Engineering) and women’s technical WhatsApp groups
  5. Complete your industrial attachment with a reputable employer
  6. Sit for NITA trade tests and get certified
  7. Apply for jobs or start your own business

 

Frequently Asked Questions

1.  Are there technical courses specifically for women?

Some institutions offer female-only classes or women’s cohorts in technical programmes. Sensei College welcomes and actively supports female enrolment in all technical courses.

2. Will employers actually hire me as a woman in a male-dominated field?

In 2026, yes. International contractors must meet diversity KPIs. Government projects under Vision 2030 have gender equity requirements. Your certification is your most powerful tool.

3. What should I do if I face discrimination at work?

Document everything, report to your HR department, and if unresolved, file a complaint with the Directorate of Occupational Safety and Health Services (DOSHS) or the Kenya National Human Rights Commission.

Conclusion

Technical skills are the great equalizer. They don’t care about gender, tribe, or background, only competency. 

Kenya needs thousands more skilled technicians by 2030, and there is absolutely no reason why half of them shouldn’t be women.

If you are a woman considering a career in plant operation, mechanics, welding, or any other technical field, this is your moment.

 Enroll today! At Sensei College, we actively support women in technical training.