Land price growth in the city’s 18 monitored suburbs edged down marginally to 5.92 per cent for the year, and 1.32 per cent for the quarter, but stayed at long-term highs, with 2024 and 2025 delivering the city’s most sustained surge in land prices in a decade, reported HassConsult, as it unveiled the land index results for the fourth quarter of 2025.
After six years of annual growth at less than 3 per cent, the city has now reported annual land price growth of over 5 per cent in every quarter since Q2 2024. Meanwhile, the three-year surge in satellite town land prices, which peaked in Q3 2024 at 12.58 per cent, slowed far more rapidly, returning to normal levels for the decade at 6.21 per cent at the end of 2025 – on quarterly growth of 1.59 per cent.
“2024 and 2025 land price growth has been the strongest we have experienced in Nairobi in a decade, driven by a chase for high-end locations for development,” said HassConsult Co-CEO Sakina Hassanali. This saw ongoing growth concentrated in some of the city’s wealthiest suburbs in Q4.
Prices continued to surge in Karen, Kilimani, Kitisuru, Gigiri, Riverside and Runda, with a 3 per cent rise in Karen, the largest for the quarter, lifting its annual growth to 10.2 per cent. However, other 2025 hotspots, such as Spring Valley, Loresho, and Upper Hill slowed down sharply, leading to a general weakening in headline growth.
In Spring Valley, annual growth of 10.4 per cent reflected hefty rises earlier in the year, but in the fourth quarter, prices rose by just 0.5 per cent. Ridgeways was the only one of Nairobi’s 18 monitored suburbs to see a land price decline in 2025, at 0.1 per cent, but its prices continued to bounce back in the final quarter from falls earlier in the year, with a further 0.6 per cent rise from September to December.
Only Muthangari, Muthaiga, and Westlands reported price falls in the final quarter of 2025, all of less than 1 per cent, with the biggest decline in Muthangari of 0.8 per cent. In the satellite towns, the final quarter saw a levelling out of growth, with hotspots slowing and the worst performers picking up.
Growth was more subdued in the fourth quarter in the year’s most heated towns, Juja, Limuru and Kiserian, all of which experienced land price growth of over 12 per cent for the year, but of 3 per cent or less in the final quarter. Of these, Juja remained the most buoyant, while Kiserian slowed the most at year end, with prices rising just 1.3 per cent from September to December.
Prices continued to accelerate in Ruiru, jumping a further 3.4 per cent in the last three months of the year and taking annual growth to 10.7 per cent. Growth also picked up in Thika, Ruaka, Ongata Rongai and Kiambu, with only Kiambu delivering a price fall for the year, of 1.5 per cent, stabilised further in the final quarter by a 0.3 per cent rise.
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