Infrastructure shifts and corporate relocations are reshaping Nairobi's investment hierarchy. See which neighborhoods offer real value as commute times shrink.
As premium suburbs hit saturation, Kilimani is emerging as Nairobi's next investment frontier—offering established infrastructure and 20–30% better value than traditional hotspots.
As major residential projects transform neighbourhoods from Syokimau to Kileleshwa, tenants are gaining leverage—but the mismatch between supply and demand tells a more complex story.
As developers unlock new suburbs and government backing grows, young buyers are discovering that entering the market no longer means stretching thin in Westlands.
Rising property values and tighter affordability are forcing both sides to recalibrate expectations, with yields under pressure and tenants voting with their feet.
From Kilimani to Ruaka, a pipeline of residential and mixed-use schemes is reshaping where young professionals and families choose to live—and what they'll pay.
A perfect storm of undersupply, corporate relocations and shifting tenant preferences is reshaping Nairobi's rental landscape—and savvy renters are repositioning accordingly.
Vacancy rates climb in Ruaka and Syokimau as new developments reshape Nairobi's rental landscape. Learn where tenants gain negotiating power and which neighborhoods remain competitive.
Three major luxury residential towers are transforming Westlands, Nairobi's most exclusive address. Discover new penthouses and premium units reshaping Kenya's premier business district.
Stricter zoning enforcement and mixed-use development policies are cooling landlord demand across premium suburbs, giving renters unprecedented leverage in a market long dominated by scarcity.
With property prices soaring across the capital, first-time buyers need a strategic roadmap to identify value, growth potential, and lifestyle fit in an increasingly fragmented market.
With average prices hovering around KES 15 million and new growth corridors emerging, here's what aspiring homeowners need to know before taking the leap.
Revised planning guidelines favour mid-rise mixed-use developments in growth corridors, signalling a potential shift in land values and construction timelines across the capital.
Three major construction approvals in Nairobi's fastest-growing middle-income corridor signal a fundamental shift in how the city builds—and who it builds for.
Major developments along Limuru Road and Valley Road are driving property values and infrastructure upgrades, but residents and investors must weigh rapid growth against livability concerns.
As property values climb across the capital, savvy investors are discovering which neighbourhoods deliver genuine cash flow—and which promise returns that don't add up.