Commercial Property for Sale in Nairobi

0 commercial properties for sale across Nairobi — offices, warehouses, retail blocks and mixed-use developments.

At a glance

Nairobi has 0 commercial properties for sale on Jumuika — from Industrial Area warehouses and CBD office blocks to Kilimani mixed-use developments and prime Westlands towers. The median asking price is , with the full inventory spanning .

The four deepest sub-area inventories sit in Industrial Area (29 properties), Westlands (27), Nairobi Central (25) and Kilimani (23). Browse the live listings below or refine by sub-area and use-class.

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The Nairobi commercial-sale market in 2026

Nairobi is the dominant commercial investment market in Kenya. There are currently 0 commercial properties for sale, with asking prices spanning . The median ask is — substantially higher than the residential median, reflecting that commercial holdings are usually whole blocks or large warehouse units rather than individual apartments.

The market splits by buyer profile:

  • Owner-occupiers buying their own premises (KES 15–80M, typically Kilimani, Westlands, Parklands, Lavington for offices; Industrial Area or Mombasa Road for warehouses).
  • Investors building yield portfolios (KES 30–200M, typically Westlands and Kilimani for offices, Industrial Area for warehouses; gross yield expectations 7–10% before opex).
  • Institutional / fund buyers (KES 200M+, focused on Westlands and Upperhill class-A towers, large Industrial Area distribution centres, and CBD legacy blocks).
  • Strategic / change-of-use buyers (variable budget, looking for parcels with development upside — particularly Kilimani residential-overlay zones permitting commercial conversion).

Where supply concentrates

Just four sub-areas hold over 55% of active inventory: Industrial Area Nairobi (29 properties, average KES 151M — mostly warehouses), Westlands (27 properties, average KES 104M — offices and mixed-use), Nairobi Central (25 properties, average KES 290M — CBD legacy blocks) and Kilimani (23 properties, average KES 207M — mixed-use and office conversions). Secondary clusters include Zimmerman (16 — smaller pockets), Mombasa Road (7 — logistics) and Upperhill (5 — corporate offices).

Typical asking prices by use-class

Use classTypical asking priceWhere to look
Small office (under 200 sqm)KES 12M – 40MKilimani, Parklands, Lavington
Mid-market office floor (200–800 sqm)KES 40M – 200MWestlands, Upperhill, Kilimani
Class-A office towerKES 200M – 4B+Westlands, Upperhill, CBD
Retail block / mall unitKES 30M – 500M+Westlands, Kilimani, CBD
Warehouse (under 2,000 sqm)KES 30M – 150MIndustrial Area, Mombasa Road
Distribution centre (2,000+ sqm)KES 150M – 650M+Industrial Area, Embakasi

What it actually costs to acquire

Headline price is rarely the full bill. Plan for transaction costs of approximately 6–10% on top:

  • Stamp duty: 4% within Nairobi City County (vs 2% in counties outside Nairobi). On a KES 50M commercial property that's KES 2M.
  • Legal fees: 1.5–2% of value to your conveyancing advocate, per the Law Society of Kenya Advocates' Remuneration Order. Commercial transactions typically attract a higher legal touch than residential due to lease assignments, service-charge audits and zoning verifications.
  • Valuation fee: KES 30K–150K depending on size and complexity. Required if you're using bank finance.
  • Bank arrangement fee (if mortgaged): typically 1–1.5% of loan value. Commercial mortgages are tighter than residential — most banks cap LTV at 70% and require 5+ year audited accounts.
  • NEMA EIA (if change of use planned): KES 50K–300K plus 4–12 weeks.
  • Pending service-charge audit: insist on the latest service-charge ledger and any pending capex contributions. Outstanding service-charge arrears transfer with the title unless explicitly excluded.

Tenancy due diligence — what you're really buying

When the asset is already tenanted, you're buying the lease as much as the building. Demand from the seller:

  • Full rent roll (tenant, suite, base rent, escalation, lease start/end, break clauses, deposits held).
  • Audited service-charge accounts for the last 3 years.
  • WALT (Weighted Average Lease Term) — investor-grade benchmark; institutional buyers expect 4+ years.
  • Vacancy report and any tenant payment-delinquency history.
  • Pending capex schedule (lift refurbishment, generator replacement, roof works) — these typically transfer with ownership unless explicitly excluded.

Financing a Nairobi commercial purchase

Kenyan commercial mortgages are tighter than residential: typical maximum LTV is 60–70%, terms run to 10–15 years (vs 25 for residential), and rates currently sit at 13.5–17% APR. Banks require audited accounts (typically 3–5 years), a current debt-service-coverage-ratio (DSCR) of 1.25+, and a tenancy schedule if the asset is leased. Some banks offer SBA-style products through the Kenya Development Bank — worth asking your relationship manager.

Commercial in counties near Nairobi

If your investment thesis is satellite-corridor growth, see commercial property for sale in Machakos (33 active — covers Athi River, Mlolongo, Mavoko, all served by the Mombasa Road corridor) and commercial property for sale in Kiambu (30 active — Ruiru, Thika, Limuru). For coastal commercial, see commercial property for sale in Mombasa.

Looking to lease rather than buy? Commercial property for rent in Nairobi covers the same neighbourhoods with monthly rent 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 properties are listed for sale across Nairobi County. The deepest sub-area inventories sit in Industrial Area (29), Westlands (27), Nairobi Central (25) and Kilimani (23). Median ask —, range —.

The median asking price across Jumuika's active Nairobi commercial-for-sale inventory is . The spread is wide: small Kilimani offices start at KES 12M; mid-market floors run KES 40–200M; CBD legacy blocks and class-A Westlands/Upperhill towers can reach KES 1–4B. Filter by sub-area and use-class to narrow your search.

Stamp duty within Nairobi City County is 4% of the property value; outside Nairobi it drops to 2%. On a KES 50M commercial property that's KES 2M due at transfer. Stamp duty is paid by the buyer and must clear before the Lands Registry will register the transfer.

Plan for 6–10% in transaction costs: stamp duty (4%), legal fees (1.5–2%), valuation (KES 30K–150K), bank arrangement (1–1.5% if mortgaged), and NEMA EIA (KES 50–300K if change of use planned). Commercial transactions also typically include a service-charge audit and tenancy-schedule review before signing.

Yes, but the bar is higher than residential. Typical Kenyan commercial mortgage terms: 60–70% maximum LTV, 10–15 year terms, rates 13.5–17% APR. Banks require 3–5 years of audited accounts, a DSCR of 1.25+, and a tenancy schedule for income-producing assets. Some banks offer Kenya Development Bank-backed products with better terms.

For income-producing assets, typical gross yields run 7–10% before operating expenses. Net yields land at 4–6% after service charge, management fees, vacancy and capex reserve. Industrial Area warehouses with long-WALT tenants typically deliver the most predictable yields; CBD office blocks vary more by occupancy.

For a tenanted asset: full rent roll, audited service-charge accounts (last 3 years), WALT calculation, vacancy report and pending capex schedule. Plus the standard: official Lands search, zoning confirmation at City Hall, structural valuation, and a NEMA assessment if you plan a change of use. The Lease Terms section below covers what to look for in the leases themselves.

Cash purchases typically close in 60–90 days. Mortgaged purchases run 120–180 days. Conveyancing for commercial assets is slower than residential — lease assignments, service-charge audits, tenant estoppel letters and zoning confirmations all add time. Engage your advocate before submitting an offer.

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Market data

Nairobi commercial-sale market snapshot

Live aggregate. Updated continuously from active Nairobi commercial-for-sale 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

Buying commercial property in Nairobi: what investors should know

Nairobi hosts 0 active commercial listings across Nairobi. Supply concentrates around four main districts (Industrial Area, Westlands, Nairobi Central, Kilimani), each with a distinct buyer profile, yield expectation and risk pattern.

Transit & catchment

The Nairobi Expressway has firmed Industrial Area and Mombasa Road logistics demand. The Northern Bypass anchors the Ruaka/Ridgeways office corridor. CBD walk-up demand benefits from the city's matatu network; Westlands and Upperhill draw catchment from the wider matatu and BRT-planned corridors.

Zoning & development upside

Nairobi commercial zones are tightly defined per the County's Development Control regime. Kilimani's residential-overlay rules now permit commercial conversion at controlled densities — making it the city's most active mixed-use development zone. Always confirm zoning with the City Hall planning desk before assuming change-of-use upside.

Security & 24/7 operations

Premium Westlands and Upperhill class-A towers operate 24/7 with on-site security. CBD class-B/C blocks often restrict after-hours access — confirm before underwriting any tenant who operates evenings (F&B, ICT, hospitality). Industrial Area warehouses typically have 24/7 freight access plus dedicated yard space.

Tenant amenity profile

Westlands offers Sarit Centre, Westgate and The Mall; CBD has the Stanbic, ICEA Lion and Anniversary towers; Kilimani is anchored by Yaya Centre and Adlife Plaza. Karen has The Hub; Industrial Area is supported by Lusaka Road services and the Mombasa Road corridor. Tenant retention correlates strongly with surrounding amenity quality.

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

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What's coming next

Infrastructure shaping Nairobi commercial values

Major infrastructure shifts move commercial property values on a 5–15 year cycle. Investors should weight projects with confirmed timelines and committed financing.

  1. Nairobi Expressway

    2022

    Compressed JKIA-to-CBD and JKIA-to-Westlands runs. Lifted commercial values along Mombasa Road, Industrial Area and Imara Daima corridors in the 18 months following completion.

  2. Eastern Bypass dualling

    Q4 2026

    Capacity doubling between Ruai and Ruiru. Improves freight access for Industrial Area, Embakasi and Mombasa Road warehouse owners serving north-east Kenya catchments. Expected positive impact on warehouse asset values.

  3. Nairobi Commuter Rail upgrade

    2027

    Refurbished routes into Nairobi Central Station. Once operational, lifts CBD office walk-up demand from outer commuter catchments — relevant to CBD legacy-block valuations.

  4. BRT corridors (Lines 2 and 5)

    2028

    Dedicated bus rapid transit on Thika Road and Juja Road. Anchors retail and office investment along these corridors over the medium term.

  5. Konza Technopolis growth

    2030+

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

  6. Citywide 5G rollout

    2026

    Safaricom and Airtel 5G across most commercial districts. Premium offices and data-capable warehouses with 5G coverage command modest investment premiums.

Zoning

Nairobi commercial zoning — investor view

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

Nairobi commercial zoning shapes both permitted use today and change-of-use upside. Confirm specific zoning with the City Hall planning desk before underwriting any value-add thesis.

Permitted uses

  • Offices (CBD, Westlands, Upperhill, Kilimani, Lavington, Parklands)
  • Retail & high-street shops (CBD, Westlands, Karen, Kilimani)
  • Warehouses & light industrial (Industrial Area, Mombasa Road, Embakasi, Imara Daima, Baba Dogo)
  • Hospitality (Westlands, Kilimani, Karen, CBD)
  • Mixed-use development (Kilimani residential-overlay; selected Westlands & Kileleshwa blocks)
  • Education & places of worship (sub-area dependent; check current zoning)

Restricted / not allowed

  • Heavy / polluting industry (designated industrial zones only)
  • Petrol stations (specific zoning approval + NEMA EIA)
  • Manufacturing in pure-office districts (not permitted in Westlands or Upperhill)
  • Bars & nightclubs in residential-overlay zones (additional liquor licensing required)

For retail buyers

Foot-traffic context for Nairobi commercial assets

Foot-traffic underpins retail and F&B asset valuations. Numbers below are typical ranges across the main districts — always commission an asset-specific count before underwriting a retail acquisition.

Westlands malls (Sarit, Westgate, Mall)
2,500–4,500/hr
Sat afternoon peak
CBD weekday peak (high street)
3,000–5,000/hr
Lunch + after-work
Kilimani / Lavington high street
600–1,500/hr
Destination retail, lower walk-up
Industrial Area (employee + visitor)
~500–1,200/hr
Weekday business hours
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 demand from a Nairobi commercial asset

If you're underwriting an income-producing commercial asset, these are the criteria national and corporate tenants weigh during site selection. Asset quality against this checklist directly affects achievable rent, WALT and exit multiples.

  • 01

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

    Mall sites in Westlands, larger CBD blocks and bigger Kilimani sites typically meet this. Older suburban high-street pockets often do not — they support local-tenant retail at lower rents.

  • 02

    Parking ratio of at least 1:50 sqm

    The Kenyan retail standard. Westlands malls, The Hub Karen and Two Rivers comfortably exceed it; older CBD blocks rarely do. Affects national-retailer interest at lease renewal.

  • 03

    Visibility from a major road or matatu route

    Anchor signage requires visibility from an arterial or major matatu corridor. Westlands' Waiyaki Way, Kilimani's Argwings Kodhek, CBD main avenues, and Mombasa Road for warehouses all qualify.

  • 04

    Full backup power and water

    KPLC outages and water rationing are operational realities. Anchor tenants require documented full-load generator capacity and borehole + storage. Assets without these typically trade at discount.

  • 05

    Access hours matching operating profile

    24/7 access for F&B and ICT; 6:00–22:00 for retail; 24/7 freight for warehouses. CBD class-B/C blocks frequently restrict after-hours access — confirm before underwriting evening-operating tenants.

  • 06

    Lease length 7–10 years with capped escalation

    National retailers and corporate office tenants prefer long leases with capped escalation. A 5–8% annual cap is the negotiating baseline; assets locked into 10%+ uncapped escalation often face tenant churn at renewal.

Buyer education

Commercial lease terms — what to read in an asset's leases

When you buy a tenanted commercial asset, the existing leases ARE the income. Understand each term as you review the rent roll, not after closing.

Base rent

Typical: per sqm/month

The headline monthly rent figure, always negotiated per square metre in commercial contracts. Pay attention to step-rates and any rent-free periods baked in.

Service charge

Typical: 15–35% of base rent

Covers shared security, lift maintenance, common-area cleaning, generators and (where applicable) borehole water. Almost always billed separately. Reconcile to actual costs annually.

Triple-net (NNN)

Typical: Standard for mall retail

Tenant pays base rent plus a share of property taxes, insurance and CAM. Increases landlord's net but transfers operating risk to tenants.

Escalation clause

Typical: 5–8% per year

Annual rent increase formula. Uncapped escalation in long leases dramatically erodes tenant covenant strength — check caps before underwriting.

Security deposit

Typical: 3–6 months base rent

Refundable on lease-end against unpaid rent and damages. Commercial deposits are unregulated in Kenya (unlike the 2-month cap on residential).

Break clause

Typical: Year 3 in 5-yr leases

Tenant's right to terminate early without penalty. Affects WALT and exit-yield discussions with future buyers.

Rent-free period

Typical: 3–6 months for fit-out

Common at lease commencement for tenant fit-out. Doesn't reduce effective rent if amortised across the lease, but reduces year-one cash flow.

Make-good clause

Typical: Standard

Tenant must restore the premises to original condition at lease-end (or pay the landlord). Strongly affects exit-yield negotiations.

Before you open

Licences your tenants will need in Nairobi

Nairobi county requirements.

Investors should understand the licensing path that constrains tenant move-in. Long licensing timelines reduce achievable rent on vacant space.

  1. Single Business Permit

    Nairobi City County

    Annual licence; tenant cannot open without it. 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)

    NEMA

    Required for any change of use or new construction. Critical if you're buying with a value-add thesis.

    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. Confirm existing certificates before completion.

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

    National Construction Authority

    Required for construction tenants. Lease completion sometimes contingent on NCA category.

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

    Nairobi County Liquor Licensing Board

    For bars, restaurants serving alcohol, off-licence retailers. Long lead time — factor into vacancy underwriting.

    Cost: KES 50,000+ Timeline: 6–12 weeks

Logistics

Parking & access — investor valuation lens

Westlands & Upperhill towers
1:30–1:50 sqm
Anchor-tenant grade
CBD legacy blocks
Below 1:80 sqm
Often public-lot reliant
Industrial Area warehouses
24/7 freight + yard
Loading bays critical
Mall-based retail
1:40–1:60 sqm
Two Rivers, The Hub, Westgate

Parking ratio is one of the few single variables that materially affects exit yield. Assets failing the 1:50 sqm Kenyan retail standard typically attract 50–150 bps yield premium (i.e. lower valuation multiple). For warehouses, yard depth and loading-bay count matter more than visitor parking — confirm both in the existing condition report.

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