Pastor Victor Kanyari has revealed that he earned roughly Ksh30 million per month for four consecutive years at his peak.
The preacher admits the ‘310 panda mbegu’ amount was a calculated move to escape poverty, netting him a total of over Ksh1.46 billion.
In a brazenly honest January 2026 confession, the controversial preacher revealed that before his 2014 exposure by investigative journalists, he was raking in a staggering Ksh1 million every single day.
Over a four-year period, Kanyari claims he amassed a fortune exceeding Ksh1.46 billion, wealth he says is “still enough to live on today.”
“I was making Ksh30 million a month,” Kanyari stated, crediting his secretary for noticing that requesting specifically Ksh310 led to a massive surge in donations.
“The amount was chosen to escape poverty. It worked.”
Despite the scandal that nearly ruined him a decade ago, Kanyari has proven to be the ultimate survivor.
He has recently traded the pulpit for the smartphone, becoming a sensation on TikTok.
Far from asking for ‘seeds’ via SMS, he now receives ‘gifts’ from followers.
He recently boasted about making over Ksh400,000 from a single month of TikTok interactions, proving that his brand of “spiritual entrepreneurship” has successfully transitioned to the digital age.

But money, it seems, cannot buy everything. Having been single since his high-profile divorce from gospel singer Betty Bayo, Kanyari used his platform this week to announce his “2026 Resolution”: finding a new wife.
In a move that set social media alight, he invited interested women to message him directly, promising a life of luxury.
“I am ready to settle down. If you are a good woman, my inbox is open,” he declared.
Perhaps most shocking was Kanyari’s admission that the “anointing” behind the number 310 wasn’t divine, but data-driven.
He revealed that it was his office secretary who first noticed that smaller, specific amounts were more “relatable” to the masses than large requests.
“She saw the pattern. People felt 310 was something they could lose without pain, but for me, when a million people do it, it’s a kingdom,” he mused.
As Kanyari cruises through 2026 in his luxury vehicles, his confession serves as a stark reminder of the “business of faith.”
While his critics call him a “conman,” Kanyari prefers a different title: Billionaire.
