Commercial Property for Rent in Nairobi

0 active commercial spaces across Nairobi — offices, retail, warehouses, godowns and showrooms.

At a glance

Nairobi has 0 active commercial spaces for rent on Jumuika — from small Nairobi CBD office desks to warehouses in Industrial Area and high-end retail in Westlands and Kilimani. The median asking rent is /month, with the full range spanning .

The five deepest inventories are Nairobi Central (219 spaces), Westlands (173), Industrial Area Nairobi (139), Kilimani (75) and Mombasa Road (47). Browse the live listings below or filter by sub-area, size or use.

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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 classTypical monthly rentWhere to look
Co-working desk / small officeKES 5,000 – 30,000Kilimani, Westlands, CBD
Small office (50–150 sqm)KES 50,000 – 250,000Nairobi Central, Parklands, Lavington
Mid-market office (150–500 sqm)KES 200,000 – 1,200,000Westlands, Upperhill, Kilimani
Class A office (500+ sqm)KES 1,200,000 – 5,000,000+Westlands, Upperhill
Retail (street / mall)KES 80,000 – 800,000Westlands, Kilimani, CBD
Warehouse / godownKES 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.

Frequently Asked Questions

As of today, 0 active commercial spaces are listed for rent across Nairobi County on Jumuika. The deepest inventories sit in Nairobi Central (219), Westlands (173), Industrial Area Nairobi (139), Kilimani (75) and Mombasa Road (47). Median asking rent is —, range —.

The four main office clusters are: Nairobi Central (CBD class B/C, deepest inventory at 219 spaces), Westlands (class A towers, premium tier), Upperhill (corporate offices) and Kilimani / Lavington (converted residential, smaller floor plates). Filter by sub-area on the listings above to narrow your search.

Three sub-areas dominate light-industrial supply: Industrial Area Nairobi (139 spaces, KES 30K – 49M depending on floor plate), Mombasa Road (47 spaces, logistics-friendly), and Embakasi (20 spaces, JKIA-adjacent). Imara Daima (30) and Nairobi South (14) hold smaller godowns suitable for SMEs.

At minimum: a Single Business Permit from Nairobi City County (KES 10K–100K+ depending on size and use), a Public Health Licence if you handle food or healthcare, an NCA registration for construction-related businesses, a NEMA EIA for any change of use, and a Fire Clearance Certificate. The Licensing Requirements section below sets out the full path.

Commercial leases are unregulated for deposits in Kenya (unlike residential, which is capped at 2 months). Typical commercial security deposits range from 3 to 6 months' rent, with higher deposits common for retail and F&B. Some landlords also ask for prepaid rent on long leases. Always confirm in writing before signing.

Most Nairobi commercial leases run for 3 to 6 years, with annual escalation clauses of 5–8%. Short-term (12-month) leases are common for co-working desks and small CBD offices. Anchor-tenant retail and large warehouse leases can run 7–10 years with negotiated escalation caps.

Almost always no — Nairobi commercial leases bill service charge separately. The service charge typically covers shared security, lift maintenance, common-area cleaning, backup generators and (where applicable) borehole water. Request the latest 12-month service-charge ledger before signing so you can budget accurately.

A triple-net lease means the tenant pays base rent plus a share of property taxes, building insurance, and common-area maintenance (CAM). NNN is the standard for Kenyan mall-based retail; pure-office and warehouse leases more commonly use base-plus-service-charge structures. The Lease Terms section below explains each.

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Market data

Nairobi commercial-rent market snapshot

Live aggregate. Updated continuously from active Nairobi commercial-for-rent listings.

Median Price
Active Listings
0
+0 in last 30d
Typical Range
Min — Max (active)
Activity Trend
Stable
vs prior 30 days

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What it's like here

Renting commercial space in Nairobi: what to know

Nairobi is East Africa's largest commercial-rent market. The county hosts 0 active listings across Nairobi — supply ranges from co-working desks and CBD offices through to class-A Westlands towers and Industrial Area warehouses.

Transit & access for tenants and customers

The Nairobi Expressway has firmed demand along Mombasa Road and Industrial Area corridors. The Northern and Eastern Bypasses open up north-eastern and eastern catchments. Matatu routes still anchor walk-up retail across Westlands, Kilimani, Karen and CBD.

Zoning & permitted use

Nairobi commercial zones are tightly defined: CBD blocks are mixed-commercial; Industrial Area is industrial-only; Westlands and Upperhill carry premium office/mixed-use designations; Kilimani and Lavington are increasingly mixed-use under residential overlay rules. Always confirm zoning before committing.

Security & after-hours access

Most premium Westlands and Upperhill towers operate 24/7 with on-site security. CBD class-B/C blocks often have limited after-hours access; if your business runs evenings (F&B, ICT operations), confirm access hours explicitly. Industrial Area warehouses typically have 24/7 freight access.

Day-to-day amenities

Westlands hosts Sarit Centre, Westgate, The Mall. CBD has the Stanbic Building, ICEA Lion Tower, Anniversary Towers. Industrial Area is supported by the Industrial Area shopping clusters, Lusaka Road services and the Mombasa Road corridor. Karen, Lavington and Kilimani each have substantial mall and high-street amenity stock.

Local snapshot for Nairobi. Verified by Jumuika research; updated periodically.

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What's coming next

Infrastructure shaping Nairobi commercial demand

Major infrastructure shifts move commercial demand and rents on a longer cycle than residential. Tenants weighing 3–6 year leases should factor in confirmed projects.

  1. Nairobi Expressway

    2022

    Compressed JKIA-to-CBD and JKIA-to-Westlands runs. Lifted logistics and office demand along the Mombasa Road and Industrial Area corridors meaningfully in the two years since opening.

  2. Eastern Bypass dualling

    Q4 2026

    Capacity doubling between Ruai and Ruiru. Improves freight access for Industrial Area, Embakasi and Mombasa Road warehouse tenants serving north-east and Thika catchments.

  3. Nairobi Commuter Rail upgrade

    2027

    Refurbished routes from Embakasi, Syokimau, Ruiru and Kikuyu into Nairobi Central Station. Once operational, will lift CBD office walk-up demand from outer commuter catchments.

  4. BRT corridors (Lines 2 and 5)

    2028

    Dedicated bus rapid transit on Thika Road and Juja Road. Will firm retail and office demand at BRT-station locations across Eastlands, Pangani and the Juja Road corridor.

  5. Konza Technopolis growth

    2030+

    Tech-city anchor 60km south. At scale, will pull data-centre, ICT and back-office demand to the southern corridor — affecting Industrial Area, Athi River and Mlolongo commercial supply.

  6. Citywide 5G rollout

    2026

    Safaricom and Airtel 5G now active across most Nairobi commercial districts. Offices and co-working spaces with 5G coverage command modest premiums.

Zoning

Nairobi commercial zoning — at a glance

Zone: Mixed by district (Commercial CBD, Industrial-only, Mixed-Use, Office-Residential overlay)

Nairobi City County operates several distinct commercial zoning regimes by district. The CBD is mixed-commercial; Industrial Area is industrial-only; Westlands and Upperhill carry premium office/mixed-use designations. Confirm specific zoning with the City Hall planning desk before signing.

Permitted uses

  • Offices (CBD, Westlands, Upperhill, Kilimani, Lavington)
  • Retail and high-street shops (CBD, Westlands, Karen, Kilimani)
  • Restaurants & cafés (CBD, Westlands, Kilimani, Lavington, Karen)
  • Warehouses & light industrial (Industrial Area, Mombasa Road, Embakasi, Imara Daima)
  • Hospitality & hotels (Westlands, Kilimani, CBD, Karen)
  • Mixed-use residential-commercial (Kilimani, Kileleshwa, Westlands)

Restricted / not allowed

  • Heavy / polluting industry (restricted to designated industrial zones only)
  • Petrol stations (require specific zoning approval + NEMA EIA)
  • Manufacturing in pure-office districts (Westlands, Upperhill — not permitted)
  • Bars & nightclubs in pure-residential overlays (separate liquor licensing required)

For retail buyers

Nairobi commercial foot-traffic context

Foot-traffic varies sharply across Nairobi commercial districts. Numbers below are typical ranges across the main commercial sub-areas — confirm with a site-specific count before committing to a retail or F&B lease.

Westlands peak (Sarit / Westgate)
2,500–4,500/hr
Sat afternoon
CBD weekday peak
3,000–5,000/hr
Lunch + after-work
Kilimani / Lavington
600–1,500/hr
Lower walk-up, mostly destination
Mall vs high-street uplift
~2–3× higher in mall locations
Hourly traffic profile (typical weekday)
7a
10a
12p
3p
6p
9p

Estimates based on Jumuika research, observed at the nearest matatu stage / mall. Not vehicle traffic.

For developers

What anchor tenants look for in Nairobi

Criteria national retailers, F&B chains and corporate office tenants typically demand before committing to a Nairobi flagship site.

  • 01

    Daily foot-traffic above 1,500/hr (retail)

    Mall locations in Westlands, the CBD and the bigger Kilimani sites typically meet this; secondary high-street locations vary by day-part.

  • 02

    Parking ratio of at least 1:50 sqm

    Kenyan retail standard. Below this and most national anchor tenants pass. Westlands malls, The Hub Karen and Two Rivers comfortably exceed it; older CBD blocks often do not.

  • 03

    Visibility from a major road or matatu route

    Anchor signage needs to be visible from the nearest arterial. Westlands' Waiyaki Way, Kilimani's Argwings Kodhek, and the CBD's main avenues all qualify.

  • 04

    Backup power (full-load generator) and water (borehole + tanks)

    KPLC outages and water rationing are real. Anchor tenants expect documented backup capacity for full-load operation.

  • 05

    24/7 freight access (warehouse) or 6:00–22:00 customer access (retail)

    Confirm the building's access hours match your operating profile before signing — many CBD class-B/C blocks restrict after-hours access.

  • 06

    Lease length 7–10 years with negotiated escalation cap

    National retail and corporate office tenants typically request long leases with capped escalation. Plan for a 5–8% annual escalation as the negotiating baseline.

Buyer education

Nairobi commercial lease terms — explained

The standard vocabulary you'll see in a Kenyan commercial lease. Know each term before signing — commercial leases are largely unregulated in Kenya, so the contract is the law.

Base rent

Typical: per sqm/month

The headline monthly rent figure. Always negotiated per square metre in commercial contracts. Confirm what's included and what is billed separately.

Service charge

Typical: 15–35% of base rent

Covers shared security, lift maintenance, common-area cleaning, generator fuel, and (where applicable) borehole water. Almost always billed on top of base rent in Nairobi.

Triple-net (NNN)

Typical: Standard for mall retail

Tenant pays base rent plus a share of property taxes, insurance, and common-area maintenance (CAM). Most Nairobi mall-based retail leases follow this structure.

Escalation clause

Typical: 5–8% per year

Annual rent increase formula. Negotiate caps in long-term leases — uncapped escalation in a 7-year lease can double your rent.

Security deposit

Typical: 3–6 months base rent

Refundable on lease-end against unpaid rent and damages. Commercial deposits are unregulated in Kenya (unlike residential, which is capped at 2 months).

Break clause

Typical: Year 3 in 5-yr leases

Tenant's right to terminate early without penalty. Negotiate this in long leases — your business plan may change before year 5.

Sub-let permission

Typical: Often restricted

Whether you can sublet space to a third party. Most landlords restrict this; negotiate explicit permission if your space planning is fluid.

Make-good clause

Typical: Standard

Tenant must restore the premises to original condition at lease-end (or pay the landlord to do so). Photograph thoroughly on move-in to limit disputes.

Before you open

Licences you'll need to open in Nairobi

Nairobi county requirements.

Before opening doors, your business will typically need each of the licences below. Use-class and floor area determine which apply.

  1. Single Business Permit

    Nairobi City County

    Annual licence; required before opening. Cost varies by use-class and floor area.

    Cost: KES 10,000 – 100,000+ Timeline: 2–4 weeks
  2. Public Health Licence

    Nairobi County Public Health

    Mandatory for food, hospitality, healthcare, education. Site inspection required.

    Cost: KES 5,000+ Timeline: 1–2 weeks
  3. NEMA EIA (change of use / new construction)

    National Environment Management Authority

    Required for any change of use or new construction. EIA report must be prepared by a NEMA-licensed expert.

    Cost: KES 50,000 – 300,000 Timeline: 4–12 weeks
  4. Fire Safety Clearance Certificate

    Nairobi County Fire Services

    Site inspection and clearance. Required for occupancy.

    Cost: KES 5,000+ Timeline: 1–3 weeks
  5. NCA Registration

    National Construction Authority

    Required for construction-related businesses (contractors, sub-contractors).

    Cost: Tiered by category Timeline: 4–8 weeks
  6. Liquor Licence

    Nairobi County Liquor Licensing Board

    Mandatory for bars, restaurants serving alcohol, off-licence retailers. Local sub-county committee approval required.

    Cost: KES 50,000+ Timeline: 6–12 weeks
  7. Sector-specific regulator licence

    Varies (CA, NTSA, IRA, CBK, KFS, etc.)

    Telecoms, transport, insurance, banking and forestry-related businesses need additional sector-specific licences. Confirm with your regulator.

Logistics

Parking and access across Nairobi commercial

Westlands & Upperhill towers
1:30–1:50 sqm
Premium parking ratio
CBD class-B/C blocks
Limited
Public-lot reliant
Industrial Area warehouses
24/7 freight
Yard + loading bays
Mall-based retail
Anchor-tenant grade
1:50 sqm typical

Parking is a major qualifier in Nairobi commercial selection. Premium Westlands, Upperhill and Kilimani towers offer dedicated parking at retail-grade ratios. CBD class-B/C blocks typically rely on public off-street lots (Bus Station, Globe Cinema, Nairobi Cinema) which carry per-hour tariffs. Industrial Area facilities focus on yard space and freight loading bays rather than visitor parking. Always confirm allocated parking bays per tenancy unit in writing.

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