The Nairobi commercial-rent market in 2026
Nairobi is by far the largest commercial-rent market in Kenya. There are currently 0 active commercial spaces for rent, with monthly asking rents spanning —. The median is —, reflecting the dominant supply of small CBD offices and Industrial Area godowns — but premium Westlands and Upperhill towers can run KES 1.5–5M+ per month, and warehouse leases in Industrial Area can reach KES 10M+ for large floor plates.
The market splits cleanly by use-class:
- Offices — Nairobi Central (CBD class B/C), Westlands and Upperhill (class A), Kilimani and Lavington (converted residential, smaller floor plates), Parklands and Karen (boutique).
- Retail — Westlands, Kilimani, Karen and high-street CBD for street-frontage and mall units; secondary clusters in Parklands and Lavington.
- Warehousing & light industrial — Industrial Area Nairobi, Mombasa Road, Embakasi (near JKIA), Imara Daima, and the Nairobi South estates.
- Hospitality / F&B — Westlands, Kilimani, Karen, Lavington and CBD entertainment corridors.
Where supply concentrates today
Three sub-areas hold over 60% of active inventory: Nairobi Central (219 spaces, median rent KES 65K–150K, mostly small-to-medium CBD offices), Westlands (173 spaces, premium tier — average KES 1.8M, but with high-end towers pulling that figure up substantially) and Industrial Area Nairobi (139 spaces, ranging from KES 30K studios up to KES 49M flagship warehouses).
Secondary clusters that matter: Kilimani (75 spaces, mid-market mixed-use), Mombasa Road (47, logistics corridor), Parklands/Highridge (36, mid-market offices), Lavington (33, boutique professional services), and Imara Daima (30, light-industrial godowns).
Typical asking rents by use-class
| Use class | Typical monthly rent | Where to look |
|---|---|---|
| Co-working desk / small office | KES 5,000 – 30,000 | Kilimani, Westlands, CBD |
| Small office (50–150 sqm) | KES 50,000 – 250,000 | Nairobi Central, Parklands, Lavington |
| Mid-market office (150–500 sqm) | KES 200,000 – 1,200,000 | Westlands, Upperhill, Kilimani |
| Class A office (500+ sqm) | KES 1,200,000 – 5,000,000+ | Westlands, Upperhill |
| Retail (street / mall) | KES 80,000 – 800,000 | Westlands, Kilimani, CBD |
| Warehouse / godown | KES 100,000 – 10,000,000+ | Industrial Area, Mombasa Road, Embakasi |
What every commercial tenant should check before signing
Kenyan commercial leases are largely unregulated compared with residential — the Rent Restriction Tribunal does not apply to commercial tenancies, and there is no statutory cap on deposits. That puts the burden on the tenant. Confirm at minimum:
- The zoning. Run the use you intend past the City Hall planning desk — operating an F&B venue on an office-only zoned floor is a stop-order in waiting. The Business Zoning section below sets out Nairobi's main commercial zones.
- The licensing path. A Single Business Permit takes 2–4 weeks; food & hospitality also need a Public Health Licence; change of use needs a NEMA EIA. The Licensing Requirements section walks through the full Nairobi list.
- The lease terms. Triple-net (NNN), escalation, security deposit, break clause, sub-let permissions. The Lease Terms section sets out the standard Kenyan vocabulary.
- Parking and access. Especially for retail and F&B, anchor-tenant standards expect a parking ratio of at least 1:50 sqm. The Parking & Access section sets out citywide expectations.
- Service charge. Most Nairobi commercial leases bill service charge separately — covering security, lift maintenance, common-area cleaning, generators and (where applicable) borehole water. Request the latest 12-month service-charge ledger before signing.
The Nairobi business-permits checklist
Before opening doors, your business will typically need: a Single Business Permit from the Nairobi City County, a Public Health Licence (food, hospitality, healthcare, education), an NCA registration (construction-related businesses), a NEMA EIA (any change of use or new construction), a Fire Clearance Certificate, and any sector-specific licences from your regulator (e.g. Communications Authority for ICT, NTSA for transport-related uses). The Licensing Requirements section below sets out timelines and indicative cost ranges.
Commute, transit and tenant catchment
Where a Nairobi commercial space sits inside the city decides who can reach it. The Nairobi Expressway has compressed JKIA-to-CBD and JKIA-to-Westlands runs meaningfully, lifting demand for office and warehouse space along the Mombasa Road and Industrial Area corridors. The Northern and Eastern Bypasses have made north-eastern industrial corridors viable for tenants whose customers come from Thika Road or the broader Ruiru/Kiambu catchment. Walk-up retail in Westlands, Kilimani, Karen and CBD benefits from the city's matatu network, which still serves the majority of Nairobi commuters.
Commercial in counties near Nairobi
If your budget or your customer base sits outside the city, commercial property for rent in Kiambu (55 active listings) covers Ruiru, Thika and Limuru. Commercial property for rent in Machakos (54 listings) extends into Athi River and Mlolongo — popular with logistics tenants serving Konza and the southern industrial belt. For coastal businesses, see commercial property for rent in Mombasa.
Looking to buy rather than rent? Commercial property for sale in Nairobi covers the same neighbourhoods with purchase pricing.
Inventory and prices on this page are pulled live from active listings. Data current as of June 2026.