Renting land in Nairobi: what the market actually looks like
Three out of every four plots currently listed for rent in Nairobi are tagged commercial, industrial or mixed-use. That is the most important fact on this page — Nairobi's land-rental market is a business-tenant market, not a household one. The supply concentrates around Karen (eight active listings — about thirty per cent of all supply), the Industrial Area, and the Imara Daima / City Cabanas logistics belt that feeds the Inland Container Depot at Embakasi.
Why the ICD changes everything
The Inland Container Depot (ICD) at Embakasi is the single biggest driver of yard-rental demand in Nairobi. Multi-acre logistics plots on Mombasa Road, in City Cabanas and around Imara Daima command monthly rents of KES 1.8M to 2.1M because their freight access is built around ICD turnaround times. If you are leasing for any container-handling, transhipment, or last-mile logistics use, the proximity penalty for being more than three kilometres from an ICD gate is steep — both in rent paid and time lost.
What makes Karen different
Karen sits at the opposite end of the market. Eight of Nairobi's twenty-seven listings are in Karen, and the price range is extraordinary — from KES 120,000 a month for a half-acre plot on Karen-Dagoretti Road to KES 120M a month for one of the top frontage acres. The bottom of the Karen range is reachable; the top is a once-in-a-decade institutional opportunity. Most actual transactions sit between KES 200,000 and KES 500,000 a month per acre.
Median, range and what they hide
The Nairobi land-lease median is — a month, but the median lies. The interquartile range runs from KES 200,000 (p25) to KES 7M (p75) — meaning half the market is concentrated in a four-fold spread, with outliers on either side. Treat the median as orientation, not as a target rent. Look at the band most relevant to your acreage, your sub-area and your tenant use-class.
Lease structures you'll encounter
Nearly all Nairobi land leases are written as monthly tenancies under a fixed-term umbrella. Three to ten years is standard, with annual escalation clauses of five to ten per cent. Long leases (five years and up) typically include a development clause permitting permanent structures, with reversion at end of term. Short leases (one to three years) restrict the tenant to removable structures: containerised offices, fencing, perimeter walls, weighbridges and demountable warehouses. Verify the landlord's authority to grant a development clause before committing capital to a permanent build.
Before you sign
Run an official search at the Nairobi Lands office (KES 500, one working day) before any deposit changes hands. Confirm current land rates and any ground rent are cleared. Verify zoning with the City Hall planning desk — many Nairobi sub-areas have strict use restrictions that override what the lease appears to permit. The full due-diligence checklist below covers every step.
Inventory and pricing on this page refresh continuously. Data current as of June 2026.