The Nairobi land market in 2026
Nairobi is unusual among Kenyan land markets in that it's bimodal. At one end sit the outer-east commuter areas — Kamulu alone hosts 479 active plots (44% of all county inventory), with an average asking price of just KES 1.4M. At the other end sit the high-prestige holdings in Karen (82 active listings, average KES 207M), Westlands (30 listings, avg KES 311M), Kilimani (28, avg KES 351M) and Lavington (25, avg KES 249M). The county median of — reflects the volume in Kamulu rather than the average value of all land transactions.
The market splits cleanly into four buyer profiles: first-plot buyers (KES 350K–3M, hunting Kamulu, Ruai and Utawala for an 1/8-acre starter), residential developers (KES 8–30M, looking at Githurai, Kasarani, Roysambu and Thome for 1/2–1 acre developable parcels), family-home builders (KES 25–100M, focused on Runda, Ridgeways and parts of Karen), and institutional/prime buyers (KES 100M+, Karen, Westlands, Kilimani, Lavington — often for multi-storey residential or commercial conversion).
Where supply concentrates today
Roughly 75% of active inventory sits in seven sub-areas: Kamulu (479), Karen (82), Nairobi Central (65), Utawala (45), Githurai (34), Westlands (30) and Ruai (28). The remaining inventory is spread across Kilimani, Lavington, Kasarani, Thome and Runda.
Typical asking prices by parcel size and location tier
| Tier | Typical 1/8 acre | Typical 1/4 acre | Typical 1 acre | Where to look |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outer commuter | KES 350K – 1.5M | KES 700K – 3M | KES 2M – 12M | Kamulu, Ruai, Utawala |
| Middle suburban | KES 1.5M – 6M | KES 3M – 12M | KES 12M – 50M | Githurai, Kasarani, Roysambu, Thome |
| Established suburban | KES 6M – 20M | KES 12M – 40M | KES 50M – 200M | Runda, Ridgeways, Kilimani Heights |
| Prime / institutional | n/a (rare) | KES 30M – 150M | KES 200M – 1.5B+ | Karen, Westlands, Kilimani, Lavington |
The two questions every land buyer must answer
Kenyan land buying gets people in trouble at two specific points: title verification and zoning / use compliance. Both are easy to skip and expensive to fix later.
Title verification means confirming with the Ministry of Lands (or the Ardhisasa portal, where the parcel is digitised) that the seller is the registered owner, the title is free of encumbrances (no caveats, no court orders, no rate arrears), and the property identifiers on the title match the parcel on the ground. The Title Deed Verification section below walks through the deed types you'll encounter (freehold, leasehold, sectional) and how to read them.
Zoning means confirming what you can actually do with the land. Nairobi City County's Development Control regime classifies parcels by zone (R1 to R7 for residential, plus commercial, industrial, mixed-use and agricultural). Build a four-storey block on an R2 plot intended for single-family use and you're looking at a stop-order and a costly variation application. The Zoning Regulations section sets out the headline limits.
Buying process and total cost
Including transaction costs, plan for an additional 6–10% on top of the asking price. The Purchase Timeline brick below sets out the step-by-step process; the Transfer Cost Calculator estimates stamp duty (4% within Nairobi City County, 2% outside), legal fees (~1.5% to your conveyancing advocate), and registry / valuation fees.
Browse land in neighbouring counties
Nairobi's land market is small relative to surrounding counties. If your budget stretches further out, see land for sale in Kiambu (1,833 active listings) or land for sale in Kajiado (1,329 listings) — both are popular with first-plot buyers priced out of Nairobi proper. For coastal investors, see land for sale in Kilifi and for the Rift, land for sale in Nakuru.
Not buying yet? See houses for sale in Nairobi for ready-built homes or land for rent in Nairobi for leasehold options.
Inventory and prices on this page are pulled live from active listings. Data current as of June 2026.