Nasaka IEBC is Kenya's civic-location platform, built to help Kenyans find, verify, and improve data about IEBC offices, voter registration centres, and electoral access points across the country. It runs under the Civic Education Kenya (CEKA) umbrella but works as a standalone public tool targeting one persistent problem: people know they need an electoral service but have no reliable way to find exactly where to go.
Search is the starting point. Any named location in Kenya can be entered, a town, a market, a neighbourhood, a road junction, and the platform connects it to the nearest relevant IEBC offices within a set radius. Users do not need to know their county boundary, constituency name, or ward designation. The platform works from where people actually are and returns what is closest and most relevant. That makes it different from a static government directory. It treats location as the beginning of a practical civic task, not an administrative test.
Search alone is not enough when the underlying data has problems. Kenya's IEBC infrastructure covers 290 constituency offices, over 27,000 gazetted registration centres, and is scaling toward 40,000-plus polling stations and service points. At that volume, errors are common: wrong coordinates, outdated addresses, offices that have relocated. Nasaka IEBC does not hide that. When confidence in a location is low, the platform marks it rather than presenting uncertain data as fact. A confidence score based on source quality, user confirmations, and time since last verification determines whether a result is shown as confirmed or flagged for review.
That is what the verification and contribution layer is for. Users who find a wrong listing can report it. Users who know an office has moved can submit a correction. Those reports go into a moderation queue reviewed by the CEKA team, and accepted changes are written back into the dataset with a full audit trail. The platform gets more accurate as more people use it, because community input goes through review before it is committed.
The platform is built to handle scale and real-world conditions. A seven-layer geocoding pipeline keeps searches returning results even for lesser-known place names. Reachability polygons at 15, 30, and 45-minute walking intervals show users not just where an office is but whether they can reasonably get there. Travel difficulty scoring gives further guidance for harder routes. Offline support extends the platform into areas with poor connectivity. A 15-language interface covers Sheng, Swahili, Luo, Arabic, Kikuyu, Maa, Somali, Urdu, Kamba, and more, so language is not a barrier to access.
The numbers give the platform its weight. Nasaka IEBC's combined reach already exceeds the margin that decided Kenya's 2022 presidential election, built with no government budget. Going into 2027, with Kenya targeting millions of new voter registrations and the IEBC running its Enhanced Continuous Voter Registration drive, the ability to surface accurate, community-maintained location data is not a secondary feature. It is the core value. Nasaka IEBC reduces the distance between a Kenyan citizen and the electoral service they need, by making locations easier to find, easier to question, and easier to correct.
At its best, Nasaka IEBC is a civic tool for finding the right place, checking whether the data is trustworthy, and fixing what is wrong. It is a public-facing system for search, verification, correction, and better access to IEBC-related services across Kenya.