As large-scale residential projects transform Nairobi's growth corridors, first-time buyers are finding fresh financing options and grant opportunities—but timing and location strategy matter more than ever.
As the capital's median property value edges past KES 15 million, three converging pressures are reshaping the market—and buyers need to understand them before making their next move.
Nairobi's volatile rental landscape is reshaping financing options for aspiring homeowners, with landlords tightening margins and tenants struggling to save for down payments.
As capital appreciation slows in premium zones, emerging corridors and mid-market suburbs are delivering the yields that savvy investors are chasing—here's what the data reveals.
Empty units are climbing faster than landlord expectations—and market clearance data reveals a decisive shift in renter leverage across the city's premium zones.
A surge in approved residential projects across growth corridors is reshaping the capital's market dynamics, but affordability pressures and infrastructure gaps remain critical questions for investors.
Supply constraints and rising construction costs are reshaping the entry-level market, but grant schemes and flexible financing options are making homeownership achievable for strategic buyers.