Mall Commercial Property for Sale in Kenya

Prime Retail Complexes & Shopping Malls for Investment in 2026

Showing 0 of 0 Updating...
Off-Plan
Updating results...

No properties found

Try adjusting your filters to find what you're looking for.

Can't find it?

Let our team hand-pick commercial property for you

Tell us your brief and get 5 curated matches within 72 hours — for KES 2,000. No commitment to buy.

Get my shortlist · KES 2,000

Curated by humans · delivered in 72h

At a glance

Discover premium mall properties and retail complexes for sale across Kenya's prime commercial districts. Our 2026 listings feature established shopping centers with high foot traffic, anchor tenants, and excellent ROI potential ranging from 8-12%. Invest in turnkey retail properties with rental incomes between Ksh 2 million to Ksh 15 million annually.

Mall Commercial Property for Sale in Kenya

Kenya's retail sector continues to show strong growth, with shopping malls and retail complexes being among the most lucrative commercial real estate investments. The country's expanding middle class and urbanization have driven demand for modern retail spaces in both urban and suburban locations.

Shopping Mall Market Overview

The Kenyan mall sector has matured significantly, with Nairobi ranking among Africa's top cities for retail development. Key trends include:

  • Growing preference for mixed-use developments combining retail, office and residential
  • Expansion into secondary cities like Mombasa, Kisumu and Nakuru
  • Increasing demand for neighborhood shopping centers serving residential areas
  • Anchor tenants including major supermarkets, pharmacies and banks driving foot traffic

Types of Retail Properties Available

Property TypeAverage Price RangeKey LocationsROI Potential
Regional Shopping MallKsh 500M - Ksh 3BNairobi CBD, Westlands, Thika Road8-10%
Community Retail CenterKsh 100M - Ksh 400MKiambu, Ruaka, Kitengela9-11%
Strip Mall/PlazaKsh 30M - Ksh 150MResidential neighborhoods nationwide10-12%

Prime Retail Investment Areas

Kenya's most sought-after locations for mall investments include:

  • Nairobi: Westlands, Karen, Lavington, Gigiri, Thika Road corridor
  • Mombasa: Nyali, Bamburi, Mtwapa along the North Coast
  • Other Cities: Kisumu's Milimani, Nakuru's CBD outskirts, Eldoret town center

Shopping Mall Investment Benefits

  • Stable Income: Long-term leases with reputable anchor tenants provide consistent cash flow
  • Appreciation: Well-located malls gain value as surrounding areas develop
  • Diversification: Multiple tenants reduce vacancy risk compared to single-tenant properties
  • Inflation Hedge: Rental agreements often include annual escalations tied to inflation

Shopping Mall Technical Specifications

When evaluating mall properties, consider these key features:

  • Sizes: Typically range from 5,000 sqm (neighborhood centers) to 50,000+ sqm (regional malls)
  • Parking: Minimum ratio of 1 parking bay per 25 sqm of lettable space in urban areas
  • Power: Three-phase electricity essential for anchor tenants like supermarkets
  • Titles: Most modern malls have clean title deeds (Freehold or Leasehold)

Frequently Asked Questions

Well-managed shopping malls in prime locations typically deliver ROI between 8-12% annually. Neighborhood retail centers often achieve higher returns (10-12%) compared to large regional malls (8-10%) due to lower acquisition costs and stable tenant demand.
Mall valuations consider: location attractiveness, foot traffic measurements, tenant mix quality (especially anchor tenants), lease terms remaining, physical condition of the property, and comparable sales. Prices typically range from Ksh 50 million for small plazas to over Ksh 3 billion for major regional malls.
Critical due diligence includes: reviewing all tenant leases (duration and terms), verifying occupancy rates and rental collections, checking service charge accounts, confirming proper licenses (especially fire safety certificates), inspecting maintenance records, and validating parking ratios meet current regulations.
Yes, mall operators need: county business permits, NEMA environmental compliance certificate, fire safety certification from county government, public health certificate, and sometimes special signage permits. Anchor tenants like supermarkets handle their own specialized licenses.
Foot traffic directly impacts rental income potential - malls with higher visitor numbers can charge premium rents. Professional valuations include pedestrian counts by time/day. Prime urban malls average 15,000-50,000 weekly visitors while successful neighborhood centers see 5,000-15,000.
Jumuika

Welcome back

Sign in to continue your search

Or continue with

Don't have an account?

Jumuika

Are you a real-estate agent?

Agents apply for verification — sign-up here is for buyers and renters.

Apply for agent access

Create your account

Find your dream home in Kenya

Or with email

Already have an account?

Verify your email

We sent a 6-digit code to