Nairobi, May 11 -- For many Kenyan professionals, wealth today is no longer confined to land and bank accounts. It sits in M-Pesa wallets, sacco shares, pension schemes, side businesses and even monetised social media platforms. However, while assets are growing and becoming more complex, the planning needed to protect them has not kept pace.

The result, lawyers warn, is that even modest estates are increasingly ending up in court, locked in disputes or distributed in ways that do not reflect the owner's wishes.

"A complete estate plan in Kenya usually includes at least five core documents: a valid written will, a trust (where appropriate), a power of attorney, a healthcare directive, and a business succession plan. Around these, you sh...