If you have ever watched an excavator work on a road construction site, you know how impressive it looks. But here is what most people do not realise: operating an excavator is a learnable, certifiable skill that can earn you a very good living in Kenya without needing a university degree.
In 2026, excavator operators are among the most sought-after workers in Kenya’s construction and mining sectors. Projects are everywhere, from the Nairobi Expressway to county roads, affordable housing, and quarry operations across the country. The demand is there. The question is: do you have the skill?
This guide walks you through exactly how to operate an excavator, step by step, safely and correctly. Whether you want to understand what the job looks like before enrolling in training, or you are refreshing your knowledge before a practical assessment, this is your starting point.
Tools and Requirements You Will Need
Before you ever touch the controls, you need to understand what it takes to operate an excavator legally and safely in Kenya.
- NTSA Class G Licence: Required to operate heavy construction equipment legally on Kenyan roads and sites
- PPE (Personal Protective Equipment): Hard hat, steel-toe boots, high-visibility vest, gloves, and safety glasses
- Site Induction Card: Issued by your employer after completing site safety briefing
- Machine Pre-Check Checklist: A printed or digital form to record machine condition before starting
- Two-Way Radio: For communication with ground crew, especially in busy or noisy sites
- Logbook / Operator ID: Some employers require a certified machine operator logbook tracking your hours
- NTSA Licence: To legally operate an excavator on a public road or government project in Kenya, you must hold an NTSA Class G (Special Vehicles) licence. Operating without one puts you and your employer at legal risk.
As of 2026, applications are processed through the eCitizen portal.
Step-by-Step: How to Operate an Excavator
Follow these steps in order.
Never skip the pre-operation checks they exist to protect you and the people around you.
Step 1
Walk around the machine (Pre-Operation Inspection)
Step 2
Mount the machine safely
Step 3
Adjust the seat and check controls
Step 4
Start the engine correctly
Step 5
Release the safety lock and test controls slowly
Step 6
Position the machine for digging
Step 7
Begin digging boom, arm, bucket coordination
Step 8
Shut down the machine correctly
Always establish a 10-metre exclusion zone around a working excavator. In Kenya, many fatal site accidents involve workers walking into the swing radius of the upper body. Make this non-negotiable on every site you work on.
Common Mistakes Beginners Make and Why They Matter
- Skipping the pre-operation check: A small hydraulic leak ignored in the morning can become a major failure by afternoon, costing the employer thousands of shillings and potentially injuring workers.
- Digging too deep too quickly: Beginners often overshoot trench depth on foundation projects. Always confirm dig depth with the site engineer before starting. Getting it wrong means backfilling and re-digging, costing time and money.
- Operating on unstable ground without checking: Many Kenyan construction sites have soft or waterlogged soils. Always probe suspect ground with a steel rod before positioning the machine. Track ground failure is one of the most dangerous excavator incidents on local sites.
- Not communicating with ground crew: Working without a banksman (ground signal person) in a busy site is dangerous and unprofessional. Always establish signal codes before starting.
- Swinging the boom over occupied areas: Swinging a full bucket over workers, vehicles, or a road is a serious safety violation. It also exposes you to legal liability if an accident occurs.
A mistake that is common with new operators is that they rush to dig before they understand the machine. An excavator is not just a shovel; it is a precision instrument. Safety and machine awareness come first. Operators who build that foundation early become the ones companies keep for years.
“In 2026, operators who can handle multiple machine types: excavators, graders, wheel loaders, are earning significantly more and finding it much easier to get international contracts. It is advisable to build your foundational skills on the excavator first, then cross-train.
When Should You Call a Professional
This guide teaches you the fundamentals of excavator operation. However, there are situations where you must stop and call a qualified engineer or your supervisor:
- Any hydraulic fluid leak that does not stop after tightening connections
- Warning lights for engine temperature, oil pressure, or hydraulic temperature that do not clear after shutdown and restart
- Unusual noises from the swing bearing, travel motor, or pump
- Track tension problems; overtightened or overly loose tracks must be adjusted by a mechanic, not an operator
- Any incident, near miss, or ground collapse: stop work, secure the area, and report immediately
Operating a faulty machine is not bravery; it is negligence. Professional operators know their limits and protect their teams and their machines by calling for help when needed.
How to Learn This Skill Professionally
Sensei College offers accredited Plant and Equipment Operation training in Kenya that includes:
- Hands-on excavator operation on real construction-grade machines
- NTSA theory test preparation (Kenya driving licence for Class G vehicles)
- Site safety certification (Occupational Health and Safety basics)
- Multi-machine cross-training (wheel loaders, graders, compactors)
- Career support and employer linkages for graduates
Graduates of Sensei College’s 2026 intake are qualifying for construction jobs in Kenya with leading infrastructure firms, as well as international opportunities in Gulf countries and the East African region.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is it safe to operate an excavator without formal training?
2. How long does it take to learn to operate an excavator?
3. Do I need a certificate or licence to operate an excavator in Kenya?
4. How do I apply for an NTSA smart DL for heavy equipment in Kenya?
5. What tools are required to operate an excavator?
6. Can I get a job abroad as an excavator operator from Kenya?
Conclusion: Your First Step Is the Most Important One
Operating an excavator is one of the most rewarding technical careers you can build in Kenya in 2026. The machines are complex, but the skills are learnable. The demand is real, the salaries are competitive, and the opportunities, both locally and internationally, are genuinely there for anyone willing to invest in proper training.
You now understand the pre-operation checks, the correct startup procedure, the basic dig cycle, common mistakes to avoid, and the safety principles that separate a professional operator from an untrained one.
The next step is yours. Get the training. Get the licence. Get on the machine.