Sunday, September 14, 2025
spot_img
spot_img

Kenya’s Growth agenda lures wealthy into new surge of Home Investment

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Kenya’s High-Net-Worth Individuals reduce focus on foreign assets in favour of building bigger positions at home.

Kenya has emerged as a safe haven for its wealthiest investors, as the country’s growth lures funds back home amid world turmoil and post-Covid slowdowns, reported Knight Frank, as it unveiled its attitudes survey results in the Kenya edition of Knight Frank’s annual Wealth Report 2024.

The attitudes survey, which is based on responses from private bankers and wealth advisors, found expectations of wealth growth among Kenyan High Net Worth Individuals (HNWIs) remain strongly positive, with 62.5 per cent anticipating wealth increases in 2024, and three-quarters expecting to maintain or increase their wealth, following from a shift in assets out of foreign markets and into expanded investments in Kenya.

Co-Op post

According to the IMF, Kenya’s GDP is forecast to rise by 5 per cent in 2024, compared with a global average of 3.1 per cent and an average of 4.2 per cent across the world’s developing and emerging economies.

“Kenya’s growth is bringing a resurgence in HNWIs buying Kenyan

property. This includes second and third homes in addition to their

commercial property investments. Wealthy investors have also taken a step back from foreign assets in favour of building bigger positions at home,” said Mark Dunford, CEO of Knight Frank Kenya.

The survey found that HNWIs are now holding about 60 per cent of their wealth in homes, with just under 30 per cent buying a home in  2023 and around the same percentage planning to buy another home in 2024.

KRA sustains revenue growth despite economic shocks

This has already brought a shift in the balance of ownership, with about 10 per cent of Kenyan HNWIs now owning homes abroad,  down from 14 per cent at the beginning of 2023.

The shift in assets has also seen a drop in interest by HNWI’s in second passports, with almost a third of wealth managers reporting that none of their clients were now interested in another passport or citizenship, and another third reported that fewer than 10 per cent were.

In non-home property, while interest remained subdued in commercial property, HNWIs reported strong interest in investing in additional farmland, hotels & leisure, and privately rented residential properties in  2024.

Investor interest in property investments other than homes

Farmland 77.5

Hotels & Leisure 69.4

Private rented residential 58.6

Student Housing 52.7

Retail 50.0

Healthcare 49.7

Education 30.3

Development land 30.0

Offices 20.8

Data centres 13.3

Logistics 13.3

Real estate debt 13.3

Such investments also coincide with a rise in attention to reducing carbon, with 60 per cent of HMWIs now investing in renewable power sources, and around half investing in increased nature and biodiversity and seeking sustainable certification and energy efficiency ratings.

“This shift towards greater sustainability even echoed into Kenyan HNWI’s investments of passion, with a strong shift from cars to art, now favoured by over 70 per cent of HNWIs as their top collectable,” said  Boniface Abudho, Research Analyst, Knight Frank Africa.

spot_img
680,250FansLike
6,900FollowersFollow
7,000FollowersFollow
9,120FollowersFollow
2,270SubscribersSubscribe

Latest Stories

spot_img

Related Stories

error: Content is protected !!