Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) infections affect about 400 million people globally and cause about 1.4 million deaths annually. The virus displays high levels of genetic variations/mutations, some of which are immune escape mutants. The prevalence of HBV infection in Kenya is high at about 8%. This study aimed at identifying and characterizing HBV immune escape mutants in Kenya. From 547 HBV sequences available in Kenya in NCBI, and HBVdb databases in July 2021, 120 full sequences were retrieved. The S gene sequences at position 1-225, which included the “a” determinant region of the gene were analyzed using various bioinformatics tools such as Bioedit software, and Emboss Cons. The clinical significance was flagged from the search of peer-reviewed journals. Forty-six HBV-positive blood donor samples were obtained from the Kenya National Blood Transfusion Services without personal identifiers, DNA extracted, and sequenced targeting positions 1 to 520 of S genes. Mutations were similarly identified from seventeen sequences after cleaning and analysis. Out of 120 sequences that were extracted from databases and analyzed, 79 different mutations were identified. Fifteen of them were of clinical importance with an occurrence frequency of at least 5% were obtained. The majority (64.6%, n = 51), with S207N and A194V being most dominant, could result in immune escape and reduced HBsAg detection signals while 24.1% (n = 19) could result in immune escape/reduced HBsAg detection signals and high probability of hepatocellular carcinoma. Most likely to occur on the amino acids Alanine, Lysine, Serine, Asparagine, and Valine in decreasing order. The most dominant genotype was found to be Genotype A (N = 10), while four sequences were Genotype D. In contrast to the in-silico studies, the sequences from HBV samples from blood donors did not demonstrate the presence of S207N and A194V mutations and all the genotypes were type A1. Only two (13.3%) samples showed the same mutations of sK122R and sT143S for both in-silico analysis and actual sequenced samples. This study did not identify G145R mutation which is the commonest mutation within the HBsAg immunodominant “a” determinant that is associated with immune escape. The concordance of mutations in “a” determinant region of HBsAg gene among various studies is minimal. The study identified new mutations (sA194Y, sS207, sA194S, sS207I, sP46A, sA194T, sS207I, sP46R, and sT143P) that had not been published before. Four (20%) of the mutations were clinically significant. These included sS207R, sT143S, sC76F and sK122R.